“It’s Always Something,” Sally Delehant

Yesterday the wind took our picture
off the wall over the piano;               birds chirped
their curt symphonies in the box elder.             I thought
of you—         your obvious loveliness,                 your obliviousness
to lost things.        An ambulance blinks two lanes over,
a restaurant goes under,       your little niece kicks off her shoe.

We pantomime infatuations,             put on scarves.
you’ll never again speak to your father.            What was
once my knee in a theater                 is tired eyes at a kitchen sink;
we fall into us.                       A squirrel upsets the feeder, hangs by one leg
and reaches.                   (Even my feet are angry.)               You tromp in
muddy leaves,                test the alarm,              whisper lub-dub.

Silvered streets gird our apartment.                   I fasten
my parka            to leave.                                   Everywhere muck, newspapers,
a blanket—        our neighbor in flip-flops has forgotten her key.
     I daydream the ocean, your hand on my ankle.
I’ll walk without stopping, won’t care if I ever do.               The wind can whip
its wants, can rattle each thing,                          rip roofs from shingles

at angles.           I’ll think of you—            forgetting
which switch is a light                    and which the disposal,

climbing on my back at a carnival,           quieting

after pendulum hung work days.           The streetlights

have been on for an hour.           Nothing will let me come to you.



From A Real Time of It (Cultural Society, 2012).

“It’s Always Something,” Sally Delehant

Yesterday the wind took our picture off the wall over the piano; birds chirped their curt symphonies in the box elder. I thought of you— your obvious loveliness, your obliviousness to lost things. An ambulance blinks two lanes over, a restaurant goes under, your little niece kicks off her shoe. We pantomime infatuations, put on scarves. You’ll never again speak to your father. What was once my knee in a theater is tired eyes at a kitchen sink; we fall into us. A squirrel upsets the feeder, hangs by one leg and reaches. (Even my feet are angry.) You tromp in muddy leaves, test the alarm, whisper lub-dub. Silvered streets gird our apartment. I fasten my parka to leave. Everywhere muck, newspapers, a blanket— our neighbor in flip-flops has forgotten her key. I daydream the ocean, your hand on my ankle. I’ll walk without stopping, won’t care if I ever do. The wind can whip its wants, can rattle each thing, rip roofs from shingles at angles. I’ll think of you— forgetting which switch is a light and which the disposal, climbing on my back at a carnival, quieting after pendulum hung work days. The streetlights have been on for an hour. Nothing will let me come to you.