Read “Asylum Pastoral, or, Happiness” from the new poetry collection, A Night in the Country, by Laura Newbern (Poetry ’94)
Asylum Pastoral, or, Happiness
Here, across the big lawn, and over the dome, the gray in the sky
is expanding, gently and slowly outward, and all over Georgia today
it is going to rain.
And in the story last night
which I read to you in the tenderest voice I could muster
the peasants stood by a pond, with the filthy ducks and the slick lilies,
and rain, rain
was coming. The men in the story were bathing: two in the bathhouse,
one in the terrible pond; the one who would not tolerate
silence, complacency,
took to the pond and the oncoming rain. And when I asked you
“was it too grim,”
I meant to be funny; I meant you are dear
to me. And here, where so many suffered, and suffered alone, here
to my left
are a greenish awning, great corroding columns, two doves
diving in ivy, and spots of brass in the sky—dull drums
of brightness, promising
something. Health, love…
unbridled silence and stillness. One cannot hear
the past, or manage the future,
but sitting, back to a tree, watching the slight light shift on a
bronzed cupola, feel
one moment’s happiness—last night I read
to you—and in the turning breeze
the rain that is coming; the cool of the pond as it must have felt
to the man, Iván, who in his restlessness
and in his delaying the girl who would bring him kindness, and sleep,
reminds me of you.
Like a candle, like happiness:
so she moves through the pages.
Laura Newbern on the web: lauranewbern.com