In colluvial dreams
we poke at the edges
of the thin membrane that separates
us from God
as though there is a weak point
that we might pass through
The back and forth of the whip-poor-wills
ping-pongs through the canyon
and the wind plays the walnut leaves like a xylophone
Somewhere beyond our limits a bobcat cries
and the rain begins to fall in large drops
that seem to rest on the rocks forever
In the narrow floodplain, a deer exhales
as the sun pushes its light over the low ridges
Once again the night turns us over to the day and we rise,
slowly, toward morning
Smoke Hole Canyon, 7/7/2011
© Jeff DeBellis, 2013
South Branch, Potomac River Smoke Hole Canyon, West Virginia Photo by Jarek Tuszynski, Wikimedia Commons |
1 comment:
What a lovely poemm! I was captivated by the first verse and thoroughly enjoyed the images from the natural world.
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