Tom Sexton: Two New Poems
Tom Sexton lives in Alaska most of the time and sometimes Down East in Maine. He and his wife, Sharyn, are bicoastal citizens of North America. He grew up in Lowell and stayed through high school years, and has come back regularly to check on the city. He’s in the Lowell High Hall of Fame and served as Poet Laureate of Alaska. His latest book is full of Lowell poems: Cummiskey Alley. You can order a copy here.
Photo courtesy of Kevin Harkins
Old Man Walking in Snow
Three crows chatting in a leafless tree
adjusting their glossy black gowns
like oblates like magistrates
glancing down at me
as April snow begins to fall.
It covers the ground in a blink.
I try to catch a flake on my tongue.
I could be inside a magical globe
a snow-globe like no other
following crow tracks toward Labrador
in snow that will never cease to come down.
Snowman
Two lumps of coal,
not buttons, for eyes,
for a nose a carrot
that’s almost hooked;
where did his maker
find that derby
sitting on his head?
His crow-black scarf
is stiff like tar is stiff;
and why is he facing
the North Atlantic
with its funereal wind,
its pounding surfs
so far from any town?
So easy to enter into this world of poetry. Thank you.