Two Poems by Marie Howe

     Note: these two poems deal with a brother's death
           from AIDS

                     The Last Time


   The last time we had dinner together in a restraurant
   with white table clothes, he leaned forward

   and took my two hands in his and said,
   I'm going to die soon. I want you to know that.

   And I said, I think I do know.
   And he said, what surprises me is that you don't.

   And I said, I do. And he said, What?
   And I said, Know that you're going to die.

   And he said, No, I mean know that you are.


                     The Promise

   In the dream I had when he came back not sick
   but whole, and wearing his winter coat,

   he looked at me as though he couldn't speak, as if
   there were a law against it, a membrane he
      couldn't break

   His silence was what he could not
   not do, like our breathing in this world,
     like our living.

   As we do, in time.
   And I told him: I'm reading all this
     Buddhist stuff,

   and listen, we don't die when we die. Death is
     an event,
   a threshold we pass through. We go on and on

   and into light forever.
   And he looked down, and then back up at me.
     It was the look we'd pass

   across the table when Dad was drunk again
     and dangerous,
   the level look that wants to tell you something,

   in a crowded room, something important,
     and can't

Links to the work of Marie Howe

Bookwire.com..Publishers Weekly Online

Poem..What the Living Do

Review of the book What the Living Do

Positively Poets..the poem How Some of it Happened