Now is the time for drowsy tanagers. -– E.S. First I lost the tick of snowflakes hitting glass. Then the sound of the cat’s tongue running over her fur. It used to be I could almost hear her tail moving, The muscles of the back stretching, the yawn going to a different register… I lost the buzz of the fly, the distant hammer of my neighbor fixing his roof, The whine of wind in the rafters and the exact words you speak As you walk away, rooms opening to other rooms, houses full Of music I’ll never hear as I walk by. The tinny laughter Of television sitcoms I don’t miss, Nor bus-farts nor gunshots of the cops But Louis Armstrong, Bessie Smith… missing a few notes Means losing the whole song, the way all the beads Fall to the floor when the string breaks. What I miss most are the sounds you wanted me to hear: The too-weet, too-weet, of the hungry towhee, The sisisisphree of the chickadee, the twonk–twonk of the woodpecker, The redwing hawk as it cries to its mate, Your mother singing, and through the years her voice cracking And shattering and coming to rest inside you. I do see the flash of the cardinal in the branches, Even the wood thrush almost invisible in its ground nest of leaves, The silent song sparrow carrying yarn in its beak, The return of hundreds of crows to our mountain every evening. For a long time, you thought I didn’t have a hearing problem, But a listening problem. And damn it, you were right. So many sounds I ignored when I had the chance to hear them. Every morning a riot of song, the stars going out, one by one – I could almost hear them. Every day our children learning to speak, Every afternoon leaning into ourselves. What’s the sound of two hands clapping? Lost are the double entendre of the bed squeaking at night, The slant rhyme of wind in the trees, The anapest of crickets. Basso profundo of the bullfrog. All that remains is the bright light on the snow And the wind moving the last leaves on the poplar. Soon comes silence, first the small silence of the deaf, Then the Big Silence growing from a spot of darkness Becoming a shadow under a tree and finally night, starless and forever. Perhaps as my hearing fades, my listening will improve, So every sound will call us home Like our mothers in the evening, Every fear becomes a sound like Echoes in the pool hall — Perhaps I will hear Chopin as I take off your bra. Remember when we were first married, How we loved being lonely together, Riding the slow train from New York to Pittsburgh, The rhythm a sympathetic magic between us? Back home, we lay in bed, kissing like waterfalls. Music will become a dream, Then a memory of a dream, Then nothing at all, just a word, An unformed idea Like color to a blind person Or like the smell of hyacinths lingering After they’ve been carried out of the room. You, my best half, know When I hate myself, I hate us And you flee to the woods to be With your birds, your snow-filled trails, Your deep ravines and wooden bridges Braided waterfalls, stone culverts And the singing of the stars As they go out one by one. Robin, the sentinel bird, lets out a cry And the pileated woodpecker chases the hawk away. Oh love, let us ride the lonely train to Pittsburgh forever Where the November symphony grows fainter every year.