Leaving the Island

We roll up the rugs and strip the beds by rote, Summer expires as it has done before. The ferry is no simple pleasure boat Nor are we simply cargo, though we’ll float Alongside heavy trucks — their stink and roar. We roll up rugs and strip the beds by rote. This bit of land whose lines the glaciers wrote Becomes the muse of memory once more; The ferry is no simple pleasure boat. I’ll trade my swimsuit for a woolen coat; The torch of autumn has but small allure. We roll up rugs and strip the beds by rote. The absences these empty shells denote Suggest the losses winter has in store. The ferry is no simple pleasure boat. The songs of summer dwindle to one note; The fog horn’s blast (which drowns this closing door.) We rolled up rugs and stripped the beds by rote. The ferry is no simple pleasure boat.

—Linda Pastan