Poems ✍️

  19.10.2025
  17


Author: New Year’s Day

New Year’s Day



 




By Kim Addonizio









The rain this morning falls   

on the last of the snow


and will wash it away. I can smell   

the grass again, and the torn leaves


being eased down into the mud.   

The few loves I’ve been allowed


to keep are still sleeping

on the West Coast. Here in Virginia


I walk across the fields with only   

a few young cows for company.


Big-boned and shy,

they are like girls I remember


from junior high, who never   

spoke, who kept their heads


lowered and their arms crossed against   

their new breasts. Those girls


are nearly forty now. Like me,   

they must sometimes stand


at a window late at night, looking out   

on a silent backyard, at one


rusting lawn chair and the sheer walls   

of other people’s houses.


They must lie down some afternoons   

and cry hard for whoever used


to make them happiest,   

and wonder how their lives


have carried them

this far without ever once


explaining anything. I don’t know   

why I’m walking out here


with my coat darkening

and my boots sinking in, coming up


with a mild sucking sound   

I like to hear. I don’t care


where those girls are now.   

Whatever they’ve made of it


they can have. Today I want   

to resolve nothing.


I only want to walk

a little longer in the cold


blessing of the rain,   

and lift my face to it.








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