Crossing the Square
Squinting through eye-slits in our balaclavas,
 we lurch across Washington Square Park
 hunched against the wind, two hooded figures
 caught in the monochrome, carrying sacks
 of fruit, as we’ve done for years. The frosted, starch-
 stiff sycamores make a lean Christmas tree
 seem to bulk larger, tilted under the arch
 and still lit in three colors. Once in January,
 we found a feather here and stuffed the quill
 in twigs to recall that jay. The musical fountain
 is here, its water gone, a limestone circle
 now. Though rap succeeds the bluegrass strains
 we’ve played in it, new praise evokes old sounds.
 White branches mimic visions of past storms;
 some say they’ve heard ghosts moan above this ground,
 once a potter’s field. No two stones are the same,
 of course: the drums, the tawny pears we hold,
 are old masks for new things. Still, in a world
 where fretted houses with façades are leveled
 for condominiums, not much has altered
 here. At least it’s faithful to imagined
 views. And, after all, we know the sycamore
 will screen the sky in a receding wind.
 Now, trekking home through grit that’s mounting higher,
 faces upturned to test the whirling snow,
 in new masks, we whistle to make breath-clouds form
 and disappear, and form again, and O,
 my love, there’s sun in the crook of your arm.
                
                    
                        Grace Schulman, “Crossing the Square” from Days of Wonder: New and Selected Poems. Copyright © 2002 by Grace Schulman. Reprinted with the permission of Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved, www.houghtonmifflinbooks.com.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        Days of Wonder: New and Selected Poems
                                                                                                                                                                    (2002)