Winter Words by Sylvia Plath
In the pale prologue
of daybreak
tongues of intrigue
cease to speak.
Moonshine splinters
as birds hush;
transfixed the antlers
in the bush.
With fur and feather,
buck and cock
softly author
icebound book.
No chinese painter’s
brown and buff
could quill a quainter
calligraph.
On stilted legs the
bluejays go
their minor leagues a-
cross the snow,
inscribing cryptic
anagrams
on their skeptic
search for crumbs.
Chipmunks enter
stripes of black
in the winter
almanac.
A scribbling squirrel
makes a blot
of gray apparel,
hides a nut.
On chastely figured
trees and stones
fate is augured
in bleak lines.
With shorthand scratches
on white scroll
bark of birches
tells a tale.
Ice like parchment
shrouds the pond,
marred by misprint
of north wind.
Windowpane wears
gloss of frost
till dawnlight blurs
and all’s erased.