I’ve read the warnings about confusing poetry with news. But sometimes the news makes you read a poem in a different way. Here’s the beginning of Stephen Dunn’s “The Same Cold”:
In Minnesota the serious cold arrived
like no cold I’d previously experienced,
an in-your-face honesty to it, a clarity
that always took me by surprise.
On blizzardly nights with wires down
or in the dead-battery dawn
the cold made good neighbors of us all,
made us moral because we might need
something moral in return, no hitchhiker
left on the road, not even some frozen
strange-looking turned away
from the door.
Dunn told how his car broke down when it was 30-below. He was saved by “a man with a candy bar and blanket,/ a man for all weather.”
It was no big thing to him, the savior.
Just two men, he said, in the same cold.
• Source: Stephen Dunn, Different Hours; New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2010, p. 61-2.