I know no one now Now I say "you" Now after the ground has opened up Now after you died I wonder what could beacon me forward into the rest of life I can glimpse occasional moments Gleaming like bonfires burning from across the fjord In a painting from around 1915 called "Midsummer Eve Bonfire" by Nikolai Astrup That shines on my computer screen in 2017 in the awful July night The house is finally quiet and still with the child asleep upstairs So I sit and notice the painting of bonfires on the hillside And hanging smoke in the valleys Wrapping back up through the fjords at dusk Offering like scars of mist draped along the ridges Of couples dancing in the green twilight around fires And in the water below, The reflections of other fires from other parties Illuminate the depths and glitter shining and alone Everyone is laughing and there is music And a man climbs up the hill pulling A juniper down to throw into the fire To make some sparks rise up to join the stars These people in the painting believed in magic and earth And they all knew loss And they all came to the fire I saw myself in this one young woman in the foreground With a look of desolation and a body that looked pregnant As she leaned against the moss of a rock soft to the side Apart from all the people celebrating midsummer I knew her person was gone just like me And just like me she looked across at the fires from far away And wanted something in their light to say: "Live your life, and if you don't The ground is definitely ready at any moment to open up again To swallow you back in To digest you back into something useful for somebody" And meanwhile above the Norwegians dancing in the twilight The permanent white snow gleamed You used to call me "Neige Éternelle." The man who painted this girl's big black eyes, gazing Drawing the fire into ourselves standing alone Nikolai Astrup, he also died young at 47 Right after finishing building his studio at home Where he probably intended to keep on Painting his resonant life into old age But sometimes people get killed before they get to finish All the things they were going to do That's why I'm not waiting around anymore That's why I tell you that I love you Does it even matter what we leave behind? I'm flying on an airplane over the Grand Canyon Imagining strangers going through the Wreckage of this flight if it were to crash And would anyone notice or care Gathering up my stuff from the desert below? Would they investigate the last song I was listening to? Would they go through my phone and see the last picture I ever took Was of our sleeping daughter early this morning Getting ready to go, and I was struck by her face Sweet in the blue light of our dim room? Would they follow the thread back and find her there? I snapped back out of this plane crash fantasy still alive And I know that's not how it would go I know the actual mess that death leaves behind It just gets bulldozed in a panic by The living, pushed over the waterfall Because that's me now, holding all your things Resisting the inevitable flooding of the archives The scraps distributed by wind A life's work just left out in the rain But I'm doing what I can to Reassemble a poor substitute version of you Made of the fragments and drawings that you left behind I go though your diaries and notebooks at night I'm still cradling you in me There's another Nikolai Astrup painting from 1920 Called "Foxgloves" that hangs on the fridge And I look at it every morning and every night before bed Some trees have been cut down next to a stream Flowing through a birch brow in late spring And two girls that look like you gather berries and baskets Hunched over like young animals, grazing With their red dressed against the White birch three trunks interweaving Beneath the cluttering leaves The three stumps in the foreground Remind me that everything is fleeting As if reminding is what I need But then the foxgloves grow And I read that the first flowers that return to disturbed ground Like where logging took place Or where someone like me rolled around wailing in a clearing Now I don't wonder anymore If it's significant that all these foxgloves spring up On the place where I'm about to build our house And go to live in, let you fade in the night air Surviving with what dust is left of you here Now you will recede into the paintings