The forecast had not predicted it, 
and its beginning, a calming, rumbled dusk 
  
and pleasant lightning, she welcomed as harbinger 
of rain. Then as night came she heard the world 
  
relapse, slide backward into winter’s insistent 
tick and hiss. In the morning, she woke to a powerless 
  
house, the baseboards cold, the sky blank, 
mercury hardfallen as the ice and fixed 
  
even at noon. The woodpile on the porch dwindled 
to its last layer; she had not replenished it 
  
for a month and could see beyond it windblown ice 
in the shed where the axe angled Excalibur-like, 
  
frozen in the wood. Still, she didn’t worry 
beyond the fate of the daffodils, green-sheathed, 
  
the forsythia and quince already bloomed out— 
knowing this couldn’t last. But by afternoon 
  
she did begin feeding the fire in the cast-iron 
stove ordinary things she thought she could replace, 
  
watching through the small window of isinglass 
the fast-burning wooden spoons, picture frames, 
  
then the phone book and stack of old almanacs— 
forgotten predictions and phases of the moon— 
  
before resorting to a brittle wicker rocker, 
quick as dried grass to catch, bedframes and slats, 
  
ladderback chairs, the labor of breaking them up 
against the porch railing its own warming. 
  
Feverlike, the freeze broke after two days, 
and she woke to a melting steady as the rain 
  
had been. The fire she had tended more carefully 
than the household it had consumed she could now 
  
let go out, and she was surprised at how little 
she mourned the rooms heat-scoured, readied for spring.
Claudia Emerson
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/spring-ice-storm/