RETURN TO THE SUMMER HOUSE
Air before rain,
air so sweet
I weep
my grandmother’s tears
as I open
each window
of the
closed
house,
remembering the scent of
water
in the air,
and her hair down to
brush out
before the sun had fully
set,
that slow, slow going down
of the July day,
the smell of gas from the
stove
where she was warming
milk
to drink
before bed.
How fresh the sheets of
night air
that surround a
child of eight,
how close the sound of the
whip-por-will at dusk,
how certain
the smell of
her
grandmother’s old skin.
II
When we got to the
cottage,
the grass
was not
mowed.
It lay like long bleached
hair
in swirls
as if under
water,
flattened like beds where
lovers had lain.
I feel their ghosts as close
as
the marks
left by damp hair against
damp skin,
like corn husk where the
silk has pressed,
like rivulets of sand where
the tide has run.
III
I shiver
walking naked to the
bathroom,
the night sky follows me
at every window,
last streaks of sun linger
on the horizon
after the storm has
passed,
the sky above
still,
black
on
blue,
and the flames of light
lick out
like tongues on the rim of
the sea.
Returning, I sleep the
deep
sleep of the very young
who go
to bed
before the sun.
Kate Cheney Chappell