Rick Hilles is the author of several poetry collections, including Brother Salvage, winner of the 2005 Agnes Lynch Starrett Prize, and A Map of the Lost World. He teaches in the English department and MFA program at Vanderbilt University and lives in Nashville.

Photograph by Pattie Traynor.

A Late Valentine

by Rick Hilles
for Jean Valentine

The Sailor cannot see the North—but knows the Needle can.
—Emily Dickinson

You set the needle down on a page
and the whole room trembled

The fireflies flashed in the periphery


The air singed as if from distant fires


Delivering the news, the shock of recognition


New depths of love that we might come to know—


*


That music that so enthralled you—
you held it close enough for us to hear


Now we have the shells     the casings
emptied and scattered                     strewn


along beachfronts at the end of a terrible year


To hear you now we must hold
the whole world up to our ears—


Read on . . .

“As with Rosy Steps the Morn,” a poem by Jean Valentine