Orion’s Belt – Anne E. Michaels

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Welcome to the March 2008 Poem of the Month.

This month’s selections hold very special meaning for me as today is Alex’s 11th birthday. I came across both of these poems recently, and have been contemplating which one I was going to send out all day. Both speak to me in different ways – one a snapshot of feeling the connectedness of parent and child as they lay outside staring up at the vastness of the universe; the other more a sidelong glimps as the parent sees a child becoming their own person. I couldn’t settle on just one, so I will simply give these TWO poems room to speak as I dedicate them to my son. Wishing you a joyous March. (Here is a link to the other poem, Natural Buoyancy).

Anne Michaels

Anne E. Michaels
(1958 – )

Orion’s Belt

It is dark enough. Just.
He’s too young to watch the late night sky,
but we walk out together
past dusk, onto the cool grass,
leaves beneath our feet.
He’s wearing pajamas
under his coat. He thinks he sees
Orion’s belt, there; no, there.
It’s funny how, at first,
All stars look alike.

Our necks begin to ache,
so I lie down. Earth is cold.
I make a blanket of myself
to keep him from the chill.
His hair tickles my chin.
We find the Little Dipper first,
then the big one. The Drinking Gourd.
The Bear.

It doesn’t look like a bear, he says.
But there, those three bright stars
do make a shining belt in heaven.
His feet are cold, my muscles stiff –
we make an awkward constellation on the lawn.
He says he sees Orion’s dagger
hanging from the belt; perhpas he does,
his eyes are better than mine.
Still, there’s haze tonight
and too much glimmer from the city
and the rising moon.

I think about Orion, who cannot feel
the grass and cool leaves brush his skin or
a child’s weight upon his body.
I hold my son against myself,
against the cold, against the earth,
against the darkness.
And from this night on, the stars are different:
named, found, loved,
recognizable in their sky.

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