Once he crossed the river. Once
across, the river swelled, forgetting
that he crossed. He, too, like a river,
forgot about his crossing, the river’s
patient rise behind him. Patient,
his chest rose; behind him a hundred
pale suns dangled over hills he, too,
had crossed. Breezy, like the lift
under a lark’s wing, he waited, waited
for the river to remember that he, too,
had lived, had forded this and that
crossing, and had chosen to make
life--to take breath, to release it.
And it was this choice the river,
fathomless, could fathom: the eternal
“what if” of a man, his feet in a river,
crossing, that lark in the cottonwood
nearby, talons clenched, drawing breath.
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1 comment:
A knock out of a poem, Gil!
Gretchen Gersh Whitman
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