Poems “Feel” and “Tempest” Accepted in California Ecopoetry Anthology “Fire and Rain” from Scarlet Tanager Books

Poems “Feel” and “Tempest” accepted in the forthcoming anthology, Fire and Rain: Ecopoetry of California from Scarlet Tanager Books.


The collective contributions to this anthology come together to weave a braid of voices examining and celebrating the dazzling variety of California’s unique biological zones.


This anthology will provide an arguably much-needed platform for the ecologies of California—from Sierra to Mojave Desert; valleys and streams; coast and forest—and will hopefully take its place in the canon of the finest writing and writers of our state


 


FEEL


Like every other summer afternoon

the sails unfurl in the blue spoon of bay,

white-capped but not enough to rouse

the silty sand. A pale half moon is

held up in the sky, coerced by those laws

we cannot see. A cattle egret flies east

from the lagoon, caring little for the

shrieking company of the terns,

in from the north and sheltering in the

marshes. A plover cries from the mudflat,

thrumming of waves heaving themselves

at the shoreline. Were you here I’d point out


the coyote’s tracks through the sand,

the distance between where each paw fell,

tell you he was running. I’d reveal the place

where, beneath the dune grass, the gull’s

body lay torn open and hollowed, say

to you, This, this is how I feel.


 


TEMPEST


Through the night the trees rocked

to and from, boughs bucked and pitched

against one another and I remember

thinking it sounded like weeping.


At first light I left the hilltop for

the shadows of the canyon. The river

was frenzied, filled with leaves

and waves and mud. I stood for a time

at that tempest, where it boils as it greets

the sea. When I turned to leave

I found the owl’s nest had fallen

from the branch that embraced it,

torn away from the old fir in the storm,

the knot of it resting at its roots.


Tonight the moon is full. I trace

its course through the sky beyond

the window in my sleeplessness, a square

of moonlight at the foot of the bed, later

waking to find it has shifted and I

am bathed in it. I am imagining the owl

in the tall four hundred-year-old Douglas fir,

standing sentinel in the black of the night

beneath a smattering of bright stars.


 


 


 


 


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Published on February 16, 2018 13:53
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