Our daughter is one and a half, you have been dead eleven days I got on the boat and came to the place where the three of us were going to build our house if you had lived You died though, so I came here alone with our baby and the dust of your bones I can't remember, were you into Canada geese? Is it significant, these hundreds on the beach? Or were they just hungry for mid-migration seaweed? What about foxgloves? Is that a flower you liked? I can't remember, you did most of my remembering for me And now I stand untethered in a field full of wild foxgloves Wondering if you're there, or if a flower means anything And what could anything mean in this crushing absurdity? I brought a chair from home, I'm leaving it on the hill Facing west and north, and I poured out your ashes on it I guess so you can watch the sunset But the truth is I don't think of that dust as you You are the sunset