The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by E. Louise Beach
CAMPFIRE AT LAKE MICHIGAN
We built it from driftwood, toasting our faces, the older folks talking in drowsy voices, while I poked a stick, saw it char in the coals. Flames crackled like popcorn, like oil in a pan, like my BB gun maiming an old tin can. Brilliant impermanence in the sand, the blaze fell to embers and set like the day as the great lake lay quietly throbbing.
FIRST FRUIT
Woman wants what her heart hears-- tree rustle, a flutter, summer in the orchard--
and bites into flesh, an hour's sweetness, bloom- dusted scion. The Sky is fire.
Mouth awry (a bitter spitter), skin mottled with flyspeck and sooty blotch,
Eve treks past autumn fruit-- fall, weight bent, down a wilderness.
I WISH TO MAKE A POEM
with Monongahela in it-- a name so primal one can hear the honeyed water when reading beside it of a Sunday, or flicking flies in a tributary for reticent trout.
Or when apprehending, at day's pink window, the Great Blue Heron-- wakeful, frozen - a tugboat churning, and thin towns thinning, passing down.
Not having seen this mellifluous river, flowing north toward Pittsburgh, I must imagine its limbless current, its liquid rhythm from a word.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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