Within
And Beyond
Ten acres to explore--my
grandfather's land.
Ten more--my Uncle Ernie's adjacent
land.
How can one's mind narrow while
roaming
twenty acres of forest and fields,
like
watching the night sky fill with its
lights?
How when watching an Alligator Lizard
spiral audibly down a cedar stump
the summer
has dried? I celebrated the tanager
colors
of June, and wanted to retain
their fervid dance, their motions
near the trunks.
Always I have longed for their river
of flight
and the light-filled leaves
stranding down
from the alders, the big alders, and
the rare birch.
Now other lessons abound. It is as
if, as one looks back
on one's life, that river of high
mountains
in its descent, and revisits
mistakes
one would give years of life to
alter,
so it is that we look at our life
from outside
our life, and find lessons as if for
another's
life--a continuation of our own, or
a psyche wholly other, that differs
as birch
from stone, or mountain from dream,
or
time from time in another place. But
the lesson
learned remains, a permanence of
information.
Always I have sought the glacier
beauty
because I have seen the glacier; and
the rural
cicada because I'd heard its song,
and the horse
snorting as he steps to the fence to
take
the apple from my hand. There is a
reaching
out, a desperate need to reach out
from within--
one's own mind seeks it and has
always sought it
though it lay hidden like the
shadows of a barn
or the long shadow of a mountain.
Jerry Austin / 5 May 2015
One of the finest poems by our editor-at-large and assistant poetry editor, Jerry Austin.
ReplyDeleteKoon, Thank You. Your suggestions to revise this piece were helpful and motivational. I now see places where I need to revise my other four pieces further below. Jerry
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