Ice
                        
                            By Gail Mazur
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            In the warming house, children lace their skates,   
 bending, choked, over their thick jackets.
 A Franklin stove keeps the place so cozy
 it’s hard to imagine why anyone would leave,
 clumping across the frozen beach to the river.   
 December’s always the same at Ware’s Cove,
 the first sheer ice, black, then white
 and deep until the city sends trucks of men
 with wooden barriers to put up the boys’   
 hockey rink. An hour of skating after school,
 of trying wobbly figure-8’s, an hour
 of distances moved backwards without falling,
 then—twilight, the warming house steamy   
 with girls pulling on boots, their chafed legs
 aching. Outside, the hockey players keep   
 playing, slamming the round black puck
 until it’s dark, until supper. At night,
 a shy girl comes to the cove with her father.
 Although there isn’t music, they glide
 arm in arm onto the blurred surface together,
 braced like dancers. She thinks she’ll never
 be so happy, for who else will find her graceful,
 find her perfect, skate with her
 in circles outside the emptied rink forever?
                
                    
                         “Ice” from Zeppo’s First Wife: New and Selected Poems by Gail Mazur. Copyright © 2005 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Common
                                                                                                                                                                    (The University of Chicago Press, 1995)