Michiganian mid-summer,
duck lake's
sandless shore
and footpath into wood
cut long ago,
bermuda grass
creeps in and up
ankle tickling,
leafshadowed sun
decanted through the tress
mapped out
onto forest floor
through half-transparent
pillars
luminous
light in shade,
cricket
hum
choruses
the summer
familiar,
the trail
itself
a home,
sun-warmth
remembered
and present,
the tree-split
before
I was born,
rain-worn
resilient
wood
opening up
as though a
wooden volcano
whose fiery belly
holds only
moss,
the day
holds,
the path
motionless
and steady
in the shadow-light,
nothing
of the moment
as a river,
the lake-
shore locks
the water,
the termite burrowed
fallen tree,
amber wood-dust
haloed out around it,
sinking slowly
into earth.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
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