The clouds as I see them, rising urgently, roseate in the mounting of somber power
surging in evening haste over roofs and hermetic grim walls—
Last night As if death had lit a pale light in your flesh, your flesh was cold to my touch, or not cold but cool, cooling, as if the last traces of warmth were still fading in you. My thigh burned in cold fear where yours touched it.
But I forced to mind my vision of a sky close and enclosed, unlike the space in which these clouds move— a sky of gray mist it appeared— and how looking intently at it we saw its gray was not gray but a milky white in which radiant traces of opal greens, fiery blues, gleamed, faded, gleamed again, and how only then, seeing the color in the gray, a field sprang into sight, extending between where we stood and the horizon,
a field of freshest deep spiring grass starred with dandelions, green and gold gold and green alternating in closewoven chords, madrigal field.
Is death’s chill that visited our bed other than what it seemed, is it a gray to be watched keenly?
Wiping my glasses and leaning westward, clearing my mind of the day’s mist and leaning into myself to see the colors of truth
I watch the clouds as I see them in pomp advancing, pursuing the fallen sun.