Christopher Roe’s most recent poem to appear here was Waiting for the bus (February 2013).
Winterscape
By Christopher Roe
I have been cold in many places
	by mountain stream
	in a darkened dream
that Winter’s icy breath erases.
But New England takes the prize
	the air is brittle
	frozen sun little
against the frozen tears in the eyes.
Matchstick trees naked and burned
	smolder in purple and gray
	that turns its chilled face away
like a host of lovers spurned.
White mantle of fallen snow a shroud
	over landscape dead
	beneath a sky of lead
and wandering black soul of a cloud.
In a dream I broke off a piece of frozen air
	and a cold pomade
	of snow and mud made
that I used to comb out my frozen hair.
Twiggy bushes like woven webs undone
	dance and swoon
	beneath a daytime moon
and snares the dime of the moth-like sun.
Distant hills like mounds of unfired clay
	awaiting the potter’s fire
	in subtle glazes they conspire
to march in single file silently away.
And among the bushes tattered and torn
	the spirit of the rose
	that every Spring grows
beside the silent sentry of the thorn.
Meadows of white linen laid out with mad buffet
	of haycock scones
	mashed potato stones
and a snow-covered plow of rusted gray.
The black crow like a nun emitting scolding caws
	a harsh lament
	a warning meant
to Winter’s intent; a fading echo to a lost cause.
And in the basement a cold furnace grumbles
	like a stomach unfed
	of ghosts of the dead
leaf that skitters and scatters and stumbles.
As evening’s purple shadows start to grow
	across the ice-cold floor
	and under the door
the frigid arctic breath of Winter blows.
Frosted window panes like an ice cube tray
	overlook a pond of desperate ice
	a frozen flatness so precise
its cracks zig zag in a rigid geometric way.
And the shivering sun and frosty moon continue changing places
	until Spring patiently exhumes
	what hungry Winter consumes
and the warming touch of love my chilblained heart embraces.

