Hard Knocking
by Carol Frome

    A man hunching into the weather
    steps around my trash can
    which has tipped over
    in the driven wind.
    His face hidden by collar and hat,
    he seems an empty coat.
    Snow flies like an enchantment
    at the window. It sets the front door to rattling,
    and then there's nothing
    but landscape, as if the man never passed.
    The door shakes with anger--no, it's regret.
    Don't forget me, don't forget me.

    So what do you say to a door that shakes at the lintel?
    No matter, the door won't care, and
    there's no closure and no closing out
    the cold--no appeasing its hard knocking
    like knuckle on wood. The old door persists
    in its indifference, and pitted and scarred,
    it rattles like bones through every winter,
    spring and fall, and no one ever comes.

    Finally, on a day in late spring, a cold day
    when we're all disappointed, I conclude
    it wants to glimpse a soul, wants a life
    to pass through it, to leave behind the residue
    of fingerprints, the warm inspiration of breath,
    something more than an empty coat
    blowing by on the gray street.






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