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Ponderosa Pine
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Ponderosa Pine |
Yesterday’s rest with writing, the Shasta failure half
digested, a short walk, then a nap, I slept to dream-groans rising under me, foreshadowing
laughs of demons. Today, I drove to the
peaceful and lovely McCloud River, walked the trail along it, hoping for its
help in sorting out unhappy circumstance from enrichment that might not have
come if I had reached the summit. The
pine trees seemed to say this is a good way to think about it.
Morning mist rising from Middle Falls—thin, ephemeral, fading
The falls behind it—strong, maker of mist, the ancient one
Yesterday’s mist—did anyone see, did mist even rise, or reach
the top
What if it did—and what if it didn’t
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Above Middle Falls
on the McCloud River |
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Jet trails above Mt. Shasta |
I rose on a trail above Middle Falls
on a jet above Shasta Mountain
see how small, how weak they are
mist from the jet, and mist from the falls
important now, remembered for years
but what of the process
the making of mist
that fading thing
that comes and goes
what of the process?
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Upper Falls
on the McCloud river
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Upper Falls
on the McCloud river |
I walked on up to Upper Falls, that splashing roaring tumult,
and watched as it obeyed the laws we call of nature. Loveliness and inspiration aside, it obeys
without knowing, falls without caring. It
does what waterfalls do. If all matter’s
so constrained, leashed to genetics’ demand, then where is one who understands? Some, it seems are free to go and say what no
longer is.
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McCloud River above Upper Falls |
There is a pool, they say, above the turbulence of falls,
where Shasta lilies grow along its sides, and frogs contently rest. A place where flow is gentle and there’s time
to watch the birds, where no mountains loom to challenge lonely souls,
and if there are, the soul’s at rest and simply looks.
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Mt. Shasta from ten miles east of McCloud on Hy 89 |
A poem by Erika Wilk
a snow cone
to be conquered
the lone climber
seeking the summit
what flavor will it be