Invisible in the fog, a chickadee sings DEE-dee, DEE-dee. Is there a word for this gray no-light air, this dusk before dawn? Through the screen door, snakes of fog twine into the kitchen--damp, cool, tinged with salt. This is summer Maine of the storybooks . . . dew-wet, shiver of breeze, windows flung open to the tender chill.
It's my last quiet morning for a while, and I am awake too early, but it's hard to regret sleep with such loveliness around me. Flowers, bowing under fog weight, glow like jewels--gold, rose, magenta, lemon, cream. In the quince a chickadee repeats, repeats. Behind her ostinato a robin bubbles, a sparrow chitters. Speckles of milky sky prick the vast shadow canopy of the maples. This tiny plot, this miniature realm . . . I wander from window to window, amazed.
A few things will happen this week. The big one will be Teresa's arrival tomorrow afternoon, triggering our flurried plunge into rehearsal mode. Then, on Wednesday, I will officially become poet laureate of Maine. There's no ceremony planned, no formality I need to step up for. Still, I'll feel at least a mental shift. Publicly I've mostly laid low since the April announcement. Primarily, I haven't wanted to take the shine off Julia Bouwsma's last few months in the position. But also I've needed time to come to grips with the idea of the job. I am a different person from Julia, from all of the previous laureates. It's important to learn from them but not imitate them. The question has been "what will I bring to the task?" I don't just mean "what projects will I do?" but "what qualities of myself must I share?"