Some Feel Rain
                        
                            By Joanna Klink
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            Some feel rain. Some feel the beetle startle
 in its ghost-part when the bark
 slips. Some feel musk. Asleep against
 each other in the whiskey dark, scarcely there.
 When it falls apart, some feel the moondark air
 drop its motes to the patch-thick slopes of
 snow. Tiny blinkings of ice from the oak,
 a boot-beat that comes and goes, the line of prayer
 you can follow from the dusking wind to the snowy owl
 it carries. Some feel sunlight
 well up in blood-vessels below the skin
 and wish there had been less to lose.
 Knowing how it could have been, pale maples
 drowsing like a second sleep above our temperaments.
 Do I imagine there is any place so safe it can’t be
 snapped? Some feel the rivers shift,
 blue veins through soil, as if the smokestacks were a long
 dream of exhalation. The lynx lets its paws
 skim the ground in snow and showers.
 The wildflowers scatter in warm tints until
 the second they are plucked. You can wait
 to scrape the ankle-burrs, you can wait until Mercury
 the early star underdraws the night and its blackest
 districts. And wonder. Why others feel
 through coal-thick night that deeply colored garnet
 star. Why sparring and pins are all you have.
 Why the earth cannot make its way towards you.
                    
                        Joanna Klink, “Some Feel Rain” from Raptus. Copyright © 2010 by Joanna Klink. Reprinted by permission of Penguin, a division of Penguin Group (USA), LLC.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        Raptus
                                                                                                                                                                    (Penguin Books, 2010)