"From the Upriver Bus"
1
At a steering wheel wide as a ship’s wheel
he sighs high, comically small.
Unknown others drone downriver, bearing
lumber or livestock, furniture or oil.
His hand, a winter-wrinkled leaf,
floats up toward the windshield.
His hand held up – not for a holdup
with a pistol, but for a greeting
unpremeditated as a kiss – brings him
no cheque, no deer meat, no
rainbow-papered gift on the doorstep.
Like a lone birdwatcher saluting another
if neither thinks he owns the meadowlark, like
a swimmer flinging one word in mid-lake
to a stranger swimming from the opposite shore,
he hardly thinks of the gesture he makes.
2
When this river country was broken
by a trail a storm could erase, a man
with frost-hooded eyebrows sped along
in a sled, his family half hidden in fur.
Bells of a stranger’s horses
became clearer and clearer.
Gloved hands, calling forth their imminent
gestures, slipped free of reins.
Struck by great waves, two ships warning
or threatening each other
startle the dark with blinking light.
3
Though early today his bones cried out,
he waves his unmistakable wave
as long as the sun stays above the trees.
Only when no hand answers
from behind the other windshield
does he wonder why he lifts his hand at all.--from Planet Harbor (Goose Lane editions 1989), reprinted in Wanting the Day : Selected Poems (Goose Lane, 2003)
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