He is walking to the sea
He must go down to the sea
Rising in the dawn light he started walking
Just went out the door, a backpack
Carrying the things anyone needs
On such a trip – planned or unplanned,
Fleeing in the night, rent unpaid
Leaving at sunrise, truck loaded,
Tractor in the barn, leaving
At noon leisurely and too late
To do anything once you get to mountains
Except gawp at the view, then turn around,
Drive home, stop for a cup of coffee in Winthrop.
Whatever the details of the leaving, take with you:
A raincoat
A knife and some matches
A candle
A sweater and a blanket
A zip-lock bag of jerkey
And some dates, still fresh.
Sturdy shoes and a strong heart
A bottle of clean water
For walking to the sea.
He went out the door
He paused to say good-bye to the towhees
Still rifling the garden for grubs,
Past the goldfinch-ravaged sunflowers
And the rose he planted in the spring
Putting out one last autumnal flower.
Wind strips the last rattling leaves from the ash
Quail huddle against the wind
Two doves come for water
On a dark, wrung out iron grey morning
The walker drops his car keys, house keys,
Mailbox key into a potted geranium. No need.
This is just a walk, far as it seems, far,
Far, very far, across mountains and brutal plains
Where there is no water, nor the sound of water,
To the sea.
He must go to the sea, down to the sea
And when he gets there – though he can already
Hear it in his heart, see with his inward eye
Long streaks of white foam rolling giant
Trees in the waves grasp –
When he gets there it is likely
He will keep on walking until the cold
Ancient salt waves wash over
Him, keep walking, keep his feet in the kelp
Forest, and see wonders, wrecked ships, skulls
Of proscribed priests, now yielding sponge prayers,
defiant slaves still in bodily chains, heroes,
Darting fish, little crabs shining in coruscating light,
Dappled living light, on and on, down where the day
turns to emerald and jade and pearls bubble up
out of bottomless chasms of darkness.
But that is far, far, very far off, very far away
And the walker has just come to the place where the suburban
Trail turns wild in pinyon and juniper, a mile
Above the sea, two thousand miles from the shore.
Three hundred pinyon jays fill the trees, mocking him
With unhinged laughing calls,
Under a sky now gone cloudless blue
Sun strikes sky hammer unsmiling, without pity
the wind mutters
You will never get where you are going,
Walking to the sea.
But for now red dust rises in little puffs
At each step, drawing the moisture from his throat
Already thirsty, already hungry, sweat already
Trickling down his back under the inadequate
The too heavy the unbalanced pack
Already weak knees, already heart pounding under
Ribs and in the ears, lightheaded, vague nausea
Settled in the pit of his already empty stomach.
Spike in his side, reminder of radiation
Scars and yew poison.
Ahead lie the mountains, bald blades of light,
Farther now than they seemed at first.
Steep whaleback hills, sheer cliffs, crumbing canyons,
Muddy rivers, bar the traveler from the massif, blue
In aethereal distance. Farther off now than at first,
A longer way. His steps are shorter, the wind picks up
Red dust from his footsteps and carries it ahead,
As if even the wind is eager to shelter
Behind chamisa and wolfberry, ominous
In its burned-over barren holiness.
If he walks ten miles a day, and this will
Not happen, he will walk for half a year.
Can he walk, just walk, not considering
Food for his belly, water for his heart,
Shoes to keep the prickly pear out, fire
To keep the wild things and the wind away?
First night, dusk comes, virga
Falls over the western mountains,
Veils of dark tears never reaching
The beseeching earth, dry as sin.
A chill in the thin air the instant
The sun drops below orange layer-cake
Mesa. Elk cross in silhouette over distant
Dry ridges, vanishing with shadows
As long as vanished summer days.
Forbidden fire against the soot-stained stone
Pinyon incense smoke dogs curl around
Blanketed knees, rising around him, covering
Scent of stale sweat, stinging tired eyes.
A rustling in the dark, light dancing against
Mountain walls, small stain of light
On ancient sea-bed stone
If any are awake
If any have eyes to see.
Wind comes with the sun
The traveler rises, mouth parched
Watches sunrise, takes some slow steps
As his walking prayer begins to turn over
In his mind, in his steps, in his breath.
A long way to water now it seems,
But in the first clean light of waking day
He sees white flashing cottonwoods ahead,
But as always here farther than they look.
Downhill now, lost elevation breaking the heart,
Along the ancient double-track dust road,
Little junipers coming up in the center.
The dust from his steps now flees behind him
Wind like a stone, a goat wind in a rock face,
Right in his face, bringing tears, snatching
Away the breath. Buffeting bare hands and ears.
The wind calls his name, cries his fate.
The road is strewn with blossoms
Paintbrush, locoweed, larkspur,
Anil del muerto, deadman’s sunflower.
The last flowers, hanging on past their day.
Another night under the tall sagebrush
Under the blanket, under a moon
So bright the shadows are dark as day
Coyotes shriek and gabble
Night birds buzz like old transformers
By the river the wind in the cottonwoods.
Giant cottonwood, cottonwood giants
By the standing stone at the place
Where water flows from the rock
Listen to the river murmuring
Over gravel shoals, reluctant
He crosses the iron bridge skeleton
Starting, at last, water bottle filled again
Up sandy-floored canyons, through silent
Walls of white stone, winding paths
To the base of inaccessible cliffs
Marked with the sign of old water,
Rattlesnake petroglyphs.
This road is scarcely a road.
Long abandoned, but still littered
With cast off vodka bottles, unidentifiable
Fragments of vanished automobiles
Rusted black, half-eaten by sun and wind.
Up, and the track grows narrow, steeper,
Zig-zagging ascent along the canyon wall,
Dust now glittering white, while the sky
Grows dark with clouds, and the lightning
Streaks violet and unheard over empty
Mountains, mutter builds into rumble,
A tall ponderosa on the looming ridge
Bursts into incandescent embers
In an eruption of flame and the utterance
Of a mighty voice. Rain comes cold.
A dream: the sea-seeker sleeps under a rock
Ledge, soot-blackened from ten thousand years
Of fire and smoke. Rain slants in lashing sheets.
Rain strikes like stones on old window glass
And slate, coals of fire glow on an eternal hearth,
Strange faces half revealed in flame, wisps of smoke,
Over everything the sighing soughing crying
Roar of the surf rattling stones in its fist.
Watcher peers from the high dormer window
Fan of five leaded panes, five bulbs in the lumiere,
Illuminate now a golden room, but the watcher
Beholds only the darkness, even the shining fir
Branches are concealed in the wrack and the storm
Lighthouse on the point gone dark, no birds cry,
Wind presides over dark billows, as it was.
Sun rises in splendor
Over plains rolling like waves
Stone ship
Wheeling birds
Floating island
Embrace of living light
Flowers spring at each step
Heat and dust finally broken
Towering thunderheads fill afternoon’s
Sky. Thunder roars like the deep sea
Crack of waves, flashes of lightning,
Wind comes, no shelter here
Except the storm itself.
Mountains like floating islands
In a cloudy sea, sun reflected
In blinding glare from cloudtop
Waves, fortresses of frost
Ice in the gray sea
Fog of pearls, waves of pearl
Gray, billows of silver grey
Like frosted sea glass.
Clouds pour through gaps in the mountains
Down canyons of dark pine
Where birds huddle still
Against the mist.
Deer shelter in the cover of red willow
Growing by the crystal creek, trout shadows
Dart beneath the shadows of cottonwoods.
Old memories tantalize like wisps of lover’s
Hair blown across his face, blown across time,
But when wakes, the space is empty.
He stands still by the stream
Until a rabbit nonchalant
Lopes out of the brush
Then freezes
Dark eye catching the wide sky
Then bolts
Off down the trail
As a childhood rhyme
Raises in his mind.
Walking, he leaves the river, passes
Dark firs full of grouse, grey jays,
Up into the sky, but still hidden
In the towering rocks. Ravens call
Like stones dropping, dark, invisible
In the shadowed shade of the fir trees.
Clouds gather dark against white rock
Mountains, lightning flickers, thunder calls
Across arroyos, across canyon, across
The deep gorge of the river
Dust rises in the wind before the rain
Wall of earth fleeing from heaviness.
All night, after the torrents of the storm
Rain falls soft, wetting the world
Like tears. His steps grow slow, stabbing,
Burning in his side, his breath shortens,
Heart hammers like a distant drum,
Lost church bells dinning in his ears.
But now, only now, following insinuation
Of wind and the edicts of the thunder,
Now he looks ahead and sees the mountains
Close by, rocky steeps, ridges like beached
Whales, dark woods marching up distant
Rampart ridges, ridge after ridge, mounting
The sky, insurmountable. And now
He knows, only now, that he will never
Reach the sea, that he will not see the waves
Again, or hear the muttering pounding
Rock-rattling surf, or feel the spindrift
Spray cold on his face. Now he is climbing
To the very roof of the mountains, heart
Of the wind, where there is no sea,
But only the imprint of ancient shells
Filling the rocks that once lay under waves.
But how sweet the duff under the cedars,
A place, finally, to rest out of the wind
Shielded from the sun, covered from the rain,
Kinglet nested in the trees of the Lord,
The holy trees, like the little druid bird
Clinging to the trunk of a beech tree
Far away where the world is green.
But now it is green here, too.
The big clouds come unseasonable
From the Sierra Madre, the flowers
Bloom again red flames as the penstemon
Fade, roses from across the sea fade
In the mountain sky’s heat.
He is nesting, nested, resting
In this skeleton of sticks lined
With down, bits of baling twine,
Horse hair, orb of twigs hidden
In the branches, sheltered
From wind, sun, rain, a world
Bounded in safety, concealed
From the ravens of trouble
Nest-seeking devourers foiled
By warmth, sustenance, cover.
As the walker rests, withdraws
Into himself, from self, shrinks
Invisibly, wind leaves his narrow
Chest, blood drains from dwindling
Limbs, heart now skipping beats
Though still in time, keeping time
Like a smith on the anvil
Iron, anvil, iron, anvil,
The ringing in his ears now
Far away, the physical jolt
Barely felt. The blows separate
Grow gentle, finessing the last
Finish from darkening steel
Still cherry-red at the center
Now out of reach within
Darkness taints the edges
One last trip through the fire
Before the long cooling quench.
Then finished blade, this body
Falls away like fire-scale
Under the grindstone of time
Leaving the shining steel
Perfect, though still twisted
By the fire.
Heart clock winds down
Falters, stops, murmurs,
Eyes behold one last light
Clouds gather, then part
Illuminating peaks of distant
Mountains.
Sea at last banished beyond
Attainment, past endeavor
Hope lost in hope
Peace sinking into peace
All surpassing peace.
Clock without hands keeps
No more time, waits for the end
Of days, for the players
To leave the darkened stage
Confused babble of mis-spent years,
Unclear, making fool’s sense
Of half remembered dreams,
He understands, he presumes
To suppose, lacks no doubt,
Convinced, though he still
Does not know what the song
Was all about.
Category: Uncategorized
Distant Love Song
A distant love song, estranged,
Fills this sleepless night watching -
How long until that hidden sunrise?
How far those burning worlds?
How distant these interior galaxies?
What did we want all those centuries ago,
In the grey house surrounded by rare trees?
Who did we wait for among the vanished
Dinner guests preparing to dance?
I see now the wheels of fire, clouds
Of cosmologic golden stardust,
The little birds still hopeful in the garden
Where all the flowers have fallen.
The old song echoes down the hall
Like last raindrops musical from the eaves
Like lost raindrops falling on golden leaves
Drifted around the velvet green trunks
Of giant maples, ancient black oaks
Laid low where the new houses will appear,
Sprawling in death’s obscene abandon
Horrifying passers-by with fickle oblivion.
Old love songs echo like axe blows
As forest giants teeter and sigh
Gathering moment in one crashing
Final breath.
A few more days while we celebrate
The coming of the Light
When the days are shortest
When the nights are long and dark
Except for the blazing moon
Sending day-dark shadows
Through high windows
Long nights waiting for the light
Darkness powerless to overcome
The brilliance emptying across
All time, uniting all perspectives
In a single horizon.
Light from Light, illumine
Our darkness, eternal Sun.
Verses for the Old Year

I.
Christmas morning
I counted birds through the dusty
Sliding glass door. These were the birds:
A mob of kinglets
Fluttering like grey butterflies
Around the suet cake.
Flickers, a pair creeping
Along the top of the wall.
Scrub jay clinging to the ruins
Of a sunflower to drink
From the saucer I’d filled
With tap water,
This dry winter overflowing
Only with sunshine.
Colors muted, observe,
Even the pair of bluebirds
Coming to the ash tree each
Morning, dusty, far above me,
Just there, but beyond my knowing.
Fed, as I am, by the hand of God.
II.
That all my days in this mortal husk
Are but seed and sign of what is to come.
Not disembodied, corporeal,
Grown here in this mundane soil
As the grain of wheat makes the bread
The acorn, the oak.
Dropped stone in time’s silent pool
The mock-orange twig turning
River’s white torrent, distant migrations,
Inevitable returns, gradual revenants.
Our ending distant and dim,
As our beginning, but foreseen.
Our prayers rise like incense
We watch for the morning
And know that the harvest
Will be slow, and incremental
As the seed reaching for the light.
Last season’s farewell-to-spring
Bringing firewheels of disappeared summers,
Prophecies of the garden that will come.
Though the rain will not come again
To a dry land, though the hand
Lose strength as youth fades,
Though the leafless tree
Does not shield from sun’s brutality,
Though the grass grow long and sere,
The flower fall, fruit wither on the branch,
If springtime fail its promise,
Summer sink in untimely frost,
Birds flee the steel gray clouds
Shrouding frozen mountains.
Even if the garden returns to thistle
The orchard goes black with neglect
Moth and blight infect the harvest
The golden treasure all be lost, the story
End half told, rust dim the shining blade,
Still I will rejoice, His name I will bless,
Stand high with the stags on the mountain
In the light of this new dawn,
I will shout praise, give thanks, yield adoration
Day triumphant over night’s vast abyss,
And with a new song forever sing His glory.
Mountains of Time
The mountains of this world are wearing away.
Wind-rounded sand turrets, rotten conglomerate
Cavern-riddled under fallen mountain peaks
Piled atop each other like a bucket filled
With children’s blocks.
Blue grey haze of digger pine and poison-oak
Around slime green seeps in shadowed canyons
Still sweltering under a stone-axe sun.
Deadly, unrelenting, pitiless.
Sun fire men drown in, now the summer
Heat makes the rivers rage cold.
Shattered rocks, abandoned wheels of iron,
Lions hunt the shadows, mephitic vapors rise
From old mine shafts. Mountains eaten through
Like fallen sparrows tunneled with maggots,
Now that the heat of summer has come.
Mountains laid low, rocky top covered
With ash trees, wild cherry, butternut
Shoved over to bury the creeks, the stream
Gone forever, never again to flow under
Shaded cedar boughs, trout shadows
Silted in, buried in mountain bones.
These are the mountains of greed
Mountains of grab all you can, grab the gold
Mountains inhabited by chained miners
Sad-eyed women strewn and broken along
Muddy streets, hungry children living in holes
While the man-created mountain rises pitiless.
Slaves in their mind-forged chains raise the ramparts
Higher, bastions of mud brick, rusting steel, spalling concrete.
The foundation cracks and crumbles even while the workmen
Raise the spire grasping for heaven.
All the mountains of the world are broken.
Shattered old schist, granite shard onion skin,
crumbling burned out dragon fire scree,
Layers of river cobble lifted up and dumped
Onto unstable clay, clay on cobble, cobble on clay,
Until the whole mountain side gives way
Some impenetrable November three o’clock
When the rain has been lashing in sheets
For two darks and the giant old fir tree
By the abandoned post office
Blew down this morning.
Memento Mori
“Dying, you will die”
He kicked the can
Punched out, punched the clock
Got his ticket punched
He took the dirt nap, flew the coop
Rode off into the sunset
Breathed his last, caught the bus
Went to have coffee with Jesus
He’s drinking mead in the hall
He climbed the stairs, closed up shop
Sleeps with the fishes, said his prayers
He’s pushing up daisies, feeding the worms
Blowing in the wind, gone with the leaves
Faded like a flower.
Fish stranded on the beach, bird fallen
From the nest, tree toppled by the storm
He ran out of gas, blew a piston
Ran off the edge, ran into the ditch
Didn’t come home from the fair
Bit the big one, came to an end
His candle was snuffed, his thread
Broken off, they broke his plate
He’s gone down the road, over the hill
Water under the bridge.
The party’s over. He croaked. He choked
He fed the tiger, met the dragon
Gave the last full measure, paid the piper
Finished the dance, the race, the fight
Went the distance, crossed the river
Rested under the trees, under the sod, under
Stone. He was tagged out at home plate, fell off his
Bicycle, fell off his chair, slipped under the bar.
They bagged him, tagged him
Fitted him for his suit, laid him out on the table
Carried out feet first, went toward the light
Whistled his tune, turned up toes
Drank the hemlock, drained the cup
Deceased, defunct, departed
He was gathered to his fathers
Fell asleep, gave up the ghost
Found the place of his resurrection.
Monsoon Comes
After the golden birds
And the birds of burnished bronze,
Sky a star-sapphire dome over
Hollyhocks of already fading July jasper.
Scent of rain on life-giving wind
Dark mountain clouds rise at evening
After tyrannical heat and days
Of the sun’s brutal power
Birds fallen from the nest
We wait for the voice
Speaking from the thunder.
Querencia
O Querencia, O mountain of heart’s desire,
Island in the West, the garden of eternity,
The mountain of God, the mountain that is the garden,
the garden that is the city, all its foundations laid in jewels –
Agate, chrysoprase, lapis lazuli, jasper, emerald.
Stones of fire, stones of living light.
Light from beyond the world, Light of the World,
You have given us a city. A vision of the river, ever flowing,
Ever clear, ever living. Fruit indescribable on branches ever-bearing,
The healing leaves. Fish without number in the living river,
All the birds of the world nested in the branches of the trees.
What music must there be!
The trees of that mountain are full of birds
Trees everblooming, growing tall
On the mountain of his glory
While the miraculous little birds echo
Songs of self-forgetful praise, no sharp
Warnings of territorial ambition, calling
To each other to come and feed on eternal
Fruit, everlasting berries of delight
Seeds of never ending life, gathering
Wind blown leaves for a nest, nesting
In his peace where no nest is needed.
Coming in the ever-dawn for living
Water and diamond gravel, grateful
For fields of wild strawberries
And rock-candy mountains, buttery
Hills, lakes of cream, all the foolish
Half-desires of long generations, now
Meaningful and fulfilled. No more
Crazed kings nesting in the trees,
Wounded for watercress, hungry
For human companionship.
Music of the wind in the healing leaves,
Songs of birds never heard before,
Over all the music of the river singing over rocks, singing in the Eternal light, singing in unison, in harmony, in counterpoint.
No thirst, no hunger,
Tears wiped away, the stone of fear forever lifted,
Scowling sun deprived of its daily tyranny, night gone,
Its terror departed, death no more.
Death no more, no more, death shall be no more,
Death you will die in the everlasting light,
The light that will never be overcome by the dark.
No more dark waters, dark woods, dark thoughts,
Darkness made obsolete in light corporeal.
No punishment remaining, nothing accursed,
All forever straight where you straighten,
Curving where you make sinuous,
All healed from disease, discomfort, disgust.
Different mountains, new mountains, peaks like star-points
Wing-edged ridges, whale-backed giant hills
Filled with cedar trees and birds, gems
Set in the mother rock, a mountain that is the city.
No crumbling bone-break talus, but pure
Crystalline blades of light, pink and green,
Blue and white, streaked through with blood-red
Jasper.
Marble from the vanished seas, each canyon
Filled with living springs, stone staircases hung with ferns
Timeless beauty, meadows of eternal blossoms.
No rising sun, no setting moon, light as even
As soft mornings in summer, light that soothes
Time dazzled eyes, light that breaks the rocks.
Mountains of light, filled with living streams
Mountains of trees, filled with voices of strange birds
Mountains beyond time, filled with light unshadowed, holy
Mountains of God.
The mountain of the Lord
The mountain of God
The city that is the mountain.
Mountain full of angels,
Mountain of cedars,
Filled with unknown colors,
Beauty unshakeable.
The mountain of the Lord is higher than the hills,
Lifted above all mountains, above the clouds.
Cascades of living light flow over living stones
Through shining canyons cleansed of tears,
City whose shadow is light, whose light is the Lamb.
Bring us to your city, your kingdom come,
Eternal praise to you,
The angels praise you,
Holy One, raiser of mountains.
The stars sing your testimony,
Maker of the light.
The trees in the middle of the River,
Praise you. Offer us their fruit, O Word.
The trees on the banks of the river,
Praise you. Heal us with their leaves, Creator of the Vine.
After Rain
Sun parts clouds, dispelling mist in blue-green
Incandescent tropical heat, vanishing
After a few sweat-filled moments. Clouds
Drift across the high mountain sun.
Walk the path lined with wolfberry, twisted,
Blackened, like remnants of rained out
Old burning bushes, cholla reaches out
Balls of thorn, ready to jump and seize
Shoes, pant legs, the back of your hand,
Clinging like old sins. Cottontails hold
Motionless, wet fur steaming in the sun,
Confident, for a rabbit, in their invisibility,
Agility, and speed. Pinon jays laugh down
The arroyo, quail call over the hill. Honey
Scent of sweet fern, aroma of dry grass
Wet by the long-awaited rain. Clouds
Mingle influences, breeze quiet, mist
Rising after summer rain.
New Mexico Spring
Empty arroyo, dry as sin,
Languishing under a cruel blue sky,
Tormented by endless sun and wind.
Mirabilis under the stone
Waiting for water, alone.