
The Night
House
Every day the body works in the fields of the
world
mending a stone wall
or swinging a sickle through the tall grass
--
the grass of civics, the grass of money --
and every night the body
curls around itself
and listens for the soft bells of sleep.
But
the heart is restless and rises
from the body in the middle of the
night,
and leaves the trapezoidal bedroom
with its thick, pictureless
walls
to sit by herself at the kitchen table
and heat some milk in a
pan.
And the mind gets up too, puts on a robe
and goes
downstairs, lights a cigarette,
and opens a book on engineering.
Even the
conscience awakens
and roams from room to room in the dark,
darting away
from every mirror like a strange fish.
And the soul is up on the
roof
in her nightdress, straddling the ridge,
singing a song about the
wildness of the sea
until the first rip of pink appears in the sky.
Then,
they all will return to the sleeping body
the way a flock of birds settles
back into a tree,
resuming their daily colloquy,
talking to each
other or themselves
even through the heat of the long afternoons.
Which is
why the body--that house of voices--
sometimes puts down its metal tongs, its
needle, or its pen
to stare into the distance,
to listen to all
its names being called
before bending again to its
labor.
~ Billy Collins
~
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