The Silver Lily
The nights have grown cool again, like
the nights
of early spring, and quiet again. Will
speech disturb you? We're
alone now; we have no reason for
silence.
Can you see, over the garden—the full
moon rises.
I won't see the next full moon.
In spring, when the moon rose, it meant
time was endless. Snowdrops
opened and closed, the clustered
seeds of the maples fell in pale drifts.
White over white, the moon rose over the
birch tree.
And in the crook, where the tree
divides,
leaves of the first daffodils, in
moonlight
soft greenish-silver.
We have come too far together toward the
end now
to fear the end. These nights, I am no
longer even certain
I know what the end means. And you,
who've been with a man—
after the first cries,
doesn't joy, like fear, make no sound?