ARROWHEAD A Maze of lakes in northern Minnesota, Crisp air adrift on owl's wings Between the wide gray skies And fanfare of muted pines; Waves lapping, lapping Against the riding prow Of the motorboat, my dad At the tiller, looking Out toward shore, quiet, His beard grown rough now After a weekend in the woods – I'm afraid to dive too deep Into the scales of the past, My callow bones, the large Boy head full of springing Illusions, upstart to replace A sense of imperfection With voracious all-devouring Enveloping thought – fishline, This daily bait of blind birdsong. Before you, Iron Range long gone, I Will always be that unbound, reedy son.
6.03.2015
The poem that took the shape of a state
One last memo from Elkhart.... a very old (& now a little revised) "shape poem"
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