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Trees Speaking of Spring and other Matters

father ponderosa

your children are all here

on the pin-wheeled edge

of your shadow

you are the idea of creation

before mountains

watching over this town

from your station

on Methodist Mountain

can i say that you are beautiful?


brother cottonwood

with your broken crown

and sweetly furrowed arms

gesturing toward home ground

soon you will be a grey cross for the land

when the trains ran coal up the river

but still your old roots

will find their way

again through clay

to awaken the residue

of the river learning the land

and your wistful

and shading crown

will turn its heady face

to the high-sun sky

can i call you promise?


honest old town

wood smoke

made of vanilla

and some slippery

and white-boned

part of the river

is trailing off towards Orion

offering its carbon breath

to night air and a million tiny deaths


and our own accumulation

born in the silent hours

of the long fallow of the heart

gathering on the gravel tongues

of dead glaciers

and we realize

that to deny roots

their dark and sinking destiny

is equal to shame

cast into the river

because we can never

fully love the land


and our town

with its legacy of gables

and broken side-walks

almost feels more ancient

than the mumbling river

with its song

of always leaving

and we also are left

to sigh and know

that it is perhaps

the holy breath

rising from the fallible

and ever leaning

flesh of spring

– Craig Nielson