TAKE HEART: A Conversation in Poetry

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Edited and Introduced by Wesley McNair, Maine Poet Laureate

Elizabeth Tibbetts, a poet from Hope, writes of this poem that when she was a nurse in a nursing home, a “lovely elderly lady with the bluest eyes, who was homesick for her island (and would never go home again), told me that snow would put things right.” And then it snowed.

 

Snow
by Elizabeth Tibbetts

The old, blue-eyed woman in the bed
is calling down snow. Her heart is failing,
and her eyes are two birds in a pale sky.
Through the window she can see a tree

twinkling with lights on the banking
beyond the parking lot. Lawns are still green
from unseasonable weather. Snow
will put things right; and sure enough,

by four, darkness carries in the first flakes.
Chatter, hall lights, and the rattle of walkers
spill through her doorway as she lies there—
ten miles (half a world) of ocean

between her and her home island.
She looks out from a bed the size of a dinghy.
Beyond the lit tree, beyond town, open water
accepts snow silently and, farther out,

the woods behind her house receive the snow
with a faint ticking of flakes striking needles
and dry leaves—a sound you would not believe
unless you’ve held your breath and heard it.

 

Elizabeth Tibbetts
Elizabeth Tibbetts

Elizabeth Tibbetts’ book of poems, In the Well, won the Bluestem Poetry Award. She has received a Maine Arts Commission Fellowship. Her work has been featured in several journals and on The Writer’s Almanac.

Take Heart: A Conversation in Poetry is produced in collaboration with the Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance. Poem copyright ©2002 Elizabeth Tibbetts. Reprinted from In the Well, Blue Stem Press, 2002, by permission of Elizabeth Tibbetts.

Questions about submitting to Take Heart may be directed to Gibson Fay-LeBlanc, Special Consultant to the Maine Poet Laureate, at mainepoetlaureate@gmail.com or 207-228-8263. Take Heart: Poems from Maine, an anthology collecting the first two years of this column, is now available from Down East Books.

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3 Comments

  1. I don’t often look at the poems but something drew me to this and it was so worth the reading and imagination it evoked.
    Thank you Elizabeth Tibbetts!

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