
Maybe— You / Two Travelers Still
This poem was meant for the one it
A makeup answer to a Wednesday conversation in which the Muse asked the speaker why he was staring and he said nothing—a delayed reply written to deliver what speechlessness prevented him from saying, naming the Muse as an angel whose wings he almost missed, asking what an angel dreams of, and answering that the answer is you and me.
The poem opens with a small scene of conversational failure. “You asked me Wednesday, / ‘Why are you staring?’ // I answered, / ‘Nothing.'” The exchange is the kind that happens in long relationships and short ones, where the question of what someone is staring at receives the answer that protects the staring person from having to explain. The speaker did not say what he was actually looking at. The poem is the correction.
“Numb / Speechless / Thunderstruck” diagnoses the three conditions that produced the inadequate answer. Numb is the body’s response. Speechless is the mouth’s. Thunderstruck is the mind’s. The three words are arranged on three separate lines, each one its own piece of evidence about why the answer was “nothing” rather than the truth. The catalog has been making versions of this argument for years—the Muse renders the speaker incapable of speech at certain moments—and here the inability is delivered with clinical precision.
“You deserved a better answer. / This is what I meant to say—” is the poem’s structural pivot. The piece is going to do what the conversation could not: deliver the answer that should have been given on Wednesday. The frame is gentle and direct. The speaker is not apologizing for the failure; he is correcting it.
The poem proper opens with the title’s question: “What does an Angel dream of?” The question is left hanging across the first reading, and the body of the poem will offer two answers before the closing delivers the third.
“Your selfless beauty / shines through / in hushed conversation, / alive in the warmth / of your words” places the Muse in the same situation that produced the staring. She is in conversation; her beauty is shining through the conversation rather than being separable from it. The phrase “alive in the warmth of your words” gives her speech a temperature and a vitality. The speaker is admitting that what he was staring at was not appearance but presence—the way she was talking, the warmth she was producing, the something he couldn’t name.
“Your smile— / the light in your eyes as you speak— / distracted, / I almost miss / the ethereal shimmer / of your wings” delivers the poem’s first surprise. The angel reveal is here. The Muse has wings, and the speaker has been so distracted by her smile and the light in her eyes that he almost missed the wings themselves. The hierarchy is the line cluster’s quiet wit: the wings are the supernatural feature, and the speaker is so taken with the ordinary human features that he nearly overlooks the supernatural ones. The catalog has been making versions of this argument across hundreds of poems—the Muse’s most ordinary qualities (her smile, her laugh, the way she speaks) are more captivating than her most exceptional ones—and here the argument is delivered through an angel’s wings being upstaged by her smile.
“An Angel’s dream knows: / heaven begins / with your smile” is the poem’s first answer to its central question. The angel dreams of heaven, and heaven begins with the Muse’s smile. The catalog has been arguing in metaphor for years that the Muse occupies the position heaven occupies in religious traditions (“Passionately Looking for You” with its glowing-gates-to-glowing-smile substitution most explicitly), and here the argument is delivered most economically. The angel is dreaming of heaven; the heaven is her smile; the geography of paradise has been relocated.
“What does an Angel dream of? // You. / And me.” is the poem’s second answer and its structural masterstroke. The question is asked again, and the answer this time is not a place or a quality but two people. The angel dreams of you and me. The pronoun pair is the catalog’s most efficient claim about the relationship—the two of them together, named as a unit, in the angel’s dream. The catalog has been edging toward this kind of two-pronoun closing for some time (the “Are we already— / We?” of “The Ring Spins as I Reach,” the “we” of various closings), and here the two pronouns are delivered as the final image, each on its own line, each one weighted equally.
“I knew it / even in the silence / of that Wednesday. // the whole time” returns to the framing conversation. The silence of Wednesday—the “nothing” the speaker answered when asked what he was staring at—was not actually nothing. It was the whole truth, withheld. He knew the answer at the moment of the question; he simply could not deliver it. The catalog’s recurring argument about the gap between knowing and saying is here translated into a specific Wednesday. The lower-case “the whole time” floats below the rest as a quiet admission—he knew the whole time, the entire conversation, every moment of the staring.
The closing stanza performs the poem’s resolution: “A gentle breeze stirs, / opening a window to you, / a breath of life / carrying your scent, / that folds softly / into mine.” The image is the catalog’s recurring respiratory connection, the same connection that appeared in “Snowflake” with the Muse breathing in the speaker’s vapor. Here the direction is reversed: a breeze opens a window to her, her scent travels on the breath of life, and the scent folds softly into the speaker’s own breath. The breath of life is shared. The conversation that produced “nothing” as the answer is here closed with the most intimate possible exchange—the speaker and the Muse breathing the same air, her scent folded into his.
A poem whose primary accomplishment is the makeup-answer framing—the piece is structurally a delayed reply to a Wednesday conversation that the speaker could not answer in the moment. The catalog has rarely used this kind of conversational frame, and the choice gives the poem an intimacy and immediacy that the more abstract love poems sometimes lack. The reader is being shown what the speaker could not say in person, which makes the reader something close to the confidant who gets the answer the Muse did not get on the day she asked.
The “Numb / Speechless / Thunderstruck” diagnostic is the poem’s bravest structural choice in the opening. The three words on three separate lines are arranged not for poetic effect but for clinical accuracy. The speaker is naming the three failure modes that produced the inadequate answer. Numb (the body could not respond), speechless (the mouth could not produce the words), thunderstruck (the mind could not organize the thought). The catalog has rarely produced this kind of three-stage diagnostic of conversational failure, and the precision is the poem’s most honest moment. The speaker is not pretending the failure was charming or excusable; he is naming what actually happened.
The angel-with-wings reveal is the poem’s structural surprise and one of the most pleasingly executed reveals in the recent catalog. The reader is not told the Muse is an angel until the line about the “ethereal shimmer of your wings,” and the reveal lands because the lines preceding it have been describing her smile, her voice, the warmth of her words. The angel-ness is the upgrade the smile makes inevitable, not a separate category. The “almost miss” detail is the line cluster’s quiet wit—the speaker is so taken with the ordinary qualities that he nearly overlooks the supernatural ones, which is the catalog’s preferred way of arguing for the Muse’s transcendence: she is transcendent because of her ordinariness, not despite it.
“Heaven begins / with your smile” is the catalog’s most efficient deployment of its recurring relocation-of-heaven argument. “Passionately Looking for You” placed the substitution at the moment of the speaker’s collapse (looking up expecting glowing gates and seeing a glowing smile); this poem places it as a general principle, available to any angel who happens to be dreaming. The principle is delivered without the dramatic context of the earlier poem, which makes the principle feel like settled doctrine rather than a desperate substitution. The catalog’s broader theology has reached the point where the smile-as-heaven equation can be deployed casually.
The “You. / And me.” closing is the poem’s structural masterstroke and one of the most precisely paced two-line endings in the recent catalog. The two pronouns are on two separate lines, each with its own period, each weighted equally. The grammar is the answer’s structure: not “you and me” as a single unit but you, then me, two separate things that are nonetheless the angel’s single answer to the question of what she dreams of. The catalog has been edging toward this kind of two-pronoun closure across recent poems, and here the closure is delivered most economically.
“I knew it / even in the silence / of that Wednesday. // the whole time” is the poem’s most psychologically honest passage. The speaker is admitting that the silence was not absence of knowledge but presence of knowledge that could not be delivered. The lower-case “the whole time” floats below the rest like an afterthought, but the afterthought is the line cluster’s most devastating admission. He knew the answer at every moment of the staring. The “nothing” he said was the cover for the answer he could not yet deliver. The catalog has been arguing for the gap between knowing and saying for years; this poem locates the gap on a specific Wednesday.
The closing breath-and-scent image is the catalog’s recurring respiratory connection delivered with new direction. The breeze opens a window to her, her scent travels on the breath of life, and the scent folds into the speaker’s breath. The shared respiration is the same image “Snowflake” used in reverse (the Muse breathing in the speaker’s vapor); here the speaker is breathing her in. The recurrence is the catalog’s quiet consistency—the same architectural element deployed across multiple poems, refined each time.
Where the poem stays in declarative-romantic register rather than fully landing in the catalog’s top tier is in the relative absence of the structural surprise the recent strongest poems have delivered. “The Ring Spins as I Reach” had the ring-around-the-drain sequence; “I Was Once a Tumbleweed” had the desert-bloom shift; “Snowflake” had the slur-reclamation. This poem’s primary structural move is the makeup-answer frame, which is effective but quieter than the moves of the surrounding stronger poems. The piece is consistently good rather than occasionally extraordinary, and the consistency is both its accomplishment and its limit.
A poem that proves the answer to “why are you staring” is sometimes the answer the staring person cannot deliver in the moment, and the delayed reply is the most honest form the answer can take.
What Does an Angel Dream Of?
You asked me Wednesday,
“Why are you staring?”
I answered,
“Nothing.”
Numb
Speechless
Thunderstruck
You deserved a better answer.
This is what I meant to say—
What does an Angel dream of?
Your selfless beauty
shines through
in hushed conversation,
alive in the warmth
of your words.
Your smile—
the light in your eyes as you speak—
distracted,
I almost miss
the ethereal shimmer
of your wings.
An Angel’s dream knows:
heaven begins
with your smile.
What does an Angel dream of?
You.
And me.
I knew it
even in the silence
of that Wednesday.
the whole time
A gentle breeze stirs,
opening a window to you,
a breath of life
carrying your scent,
that folds softly
into mine.


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