Matins, By LOUISE GLUCK
I see it is with you as with the birches:
I am not to speak to you
in the personal way. Much
has passed between us. Or
was it always only
on the one side? I am
at fault, at fault, I asked you
to be human--I am no needier
than other people. But the absence
of all feeling, of the least
concern for me--I might as well go on
addressing the birches,
as in my former life: let them
do their worst, let them
bury me with the Romantics,
their pointed yellow leaves
falling and covering me.
From “The Wild Iris†(Ecco: $19.95; 63 pp.).
1992 by Louise Gluck. Reprinted by permission . These are austere, spare poems, set in chilly winter weather.
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