Produced by Dennis Camire
This week’s poem is by Thomas Moore and is from his book “Saving Nails” (Moon Pie Press 2016). He’s the current poet laureate of Belfast, Maine.
Smith Cove: Light to Dark
By Thomas Moore
Or the roof of a Dodge or the curved
Bottom of a wooden sloop;
It is stacked blankets unfolding,
Mauve under violet, blue over yellowish
Gray. Sometimes the sky is scarlet
Down-comforters, and sometimes
The sun exhales a silence that settles
From Henry Point to Sheep Island
To the Mill Pond dam. Sometimes
Gulls and eagles ride the light and
Sometimes an osprey explodes
Through it for a mackerel. The tide
Curves and uncurves the shore, spruce
Shadows twirl the meadow, and when
Fitz Henry Lane’s moon sinks
Into Indian Bar the cove darkens,
The blankets fold into mist.
It is then that the sky over Smith
Cove may be a saucepan warming
Blue bean soup, or the roof
Of a gray Dodge pick-up or
The bottom of a sloop returning
Late from a Bagaduce picnic.
Dennis Camire can be reached at dcamire@cmcc.edu
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