Shoveling Snow, New England by Childe Hassam |
Our blog will be taking a short vacation for the rest of December and will return to posting regularly on Monday, January 4. In the meantime, I thought I'd share with you a prose poem I wrote many years ago. This year we not only have "winter" to get through but many more months of extra hard times due to the pandemic. So I thought that this one-sentence story, which references a "long gray season of darkness and cold and grief" might bring you some comfort. —Nina
WINTER
by Nina Zolotow
In their garden there was always a wild profusion of tomatoes ripening on the vine, and leafy basil, arugula, and lettuce, and glossy purple eggplants, and red and yellow peppers, and zucchini with its long, bright blossoms, and there was always lunch at the wooden table on hot summer afternoons, with plates of pasta and bread and olives and salads with herbs, and many bottles of red wine that made you feel warm and drowsy, while bees hummed and the sprawling marjoram, thyme and rosemary gave off their pungent fragrances, and at the end of the meal, always, inexplicably, there were fresh black figs that they picked themselves from the tree at the garden’s center, an 18-foot fig tree, for how was it possible—this was not Tuscany, but Ithaca, Ithaca, New York, a rough-hewn landscape of deep rocky gorges and bitter icy winters, and I finally had to ask him—my neighbor—how did that beautiful tree live through the year, how did it endure the harshness of a New York winter and not only survive until spring, but continue producing that miraculous fruit, year after year, and he told me that it was quite simple, really, that every fall, after the tree lost all its leaves, he would sever the tree’s roots on one side only and, on the tree’s other side, he would dig a trench, and then he would just lay down that flexible trunk and limbs, lay them down in the earth and gently cover them with soil, and there the fig tree would rest, warm and protected, until spring came, when he could remove its protective covering and stand the tree up once again to greet the sun; and now in this long gray season of darkness and cold and grief (do I have to tell you over what? for isn’t it always the same—the loss of a lover, the death of a child, or the incomprehensible cruelty of one human being to another?), as I gaze out of my window at the empty space where the fig tree will stand again next spring, I think, yes, lay me down like that, lay me down like the fig tree that sleeps in the earth, and let my body rest easily on the ground—my roots connecting me to some warm immutable center—luxuriating in the heart of winter.
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Winter Vacation and Winter Prose Poem
Reviewed by Dr. Swatee
on
December 23, 2020
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