Skating Backwards
by Jill Crainshaw
He just keeps skating
on, thermal gloves flashing
purple and black against the marbled sky,
purple and black against the marbled sky,
hostile to the numbing
bone-chill in the air,
borrowed quicksilver blades biting the ice as
he skims arctic waters more treacherous
borrowed quicksilver blades biting the ice as
he skims arctic waters more treacherous
than he cares or is
willing to let himself know,
tense muscles pushing
hard to keep getting
there, and all the
while over his shoulder,
a bejeweled willow
bows low over ice scarred
by tangled tales he scratches out as he
forges ahead across the frosty expanse.
by tangled tales he scratches out as he
forges ahead across the frosty expanse.
I walk on the glassy
water in street shoes
and yearn for a fissure, a stumble,
a fall, a turning. Squinting down through
and yearn for a fissure, a stumble,
a fall, a turning. Squinting down through
distorting wintry
lenses, I think I see
the burnt orange shadow of a sunfish eager
for a splash of summer sun. But winter has not
the burnt orange shadow of a sunfish eager
for a splash of summer sun. But winter has not
yet finished her work.
Then I hear giggles.
A red-mittened girl
and her wind-blushed
mother. Face to face they make their
way with awkward delight across the lake,
holding hands and choreographing
mother. Face to face they make their
way with awkward delight across the lake,
holding hands and choreographing
a tenacious dance as
first one and then
the other learns to skate backwards.
the other learns to skate backwards.
* * * * *
Jill
Crainshaw is a professor at Wake Forest University School of Divinity in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina. She enjoys exploring how words give voice to
unexpected ideas, insights and visions.
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