My favorite stump straddles a gully a dozen
miles from any human habitation.
My eschatology includes scats, animal poop,
scatology so that when I nestle under this stump
out of the rain I see the scats of bear, bobcat,
coyote. I won’t say that I feel at home
under this vast white pine stump, the roots
spread around me, so large in places no arms
can encircle them, as if you were under the body
of a mythic spider, the thunder ratcheting
the sky so that the earth hums beneath you.
Here is a place to think about nothing,
which is what I do. If the rain beats down
hard enough tiny creeks form beside my shit-strewn
pile of sand. The coyote has been eating mice,
the bear berries, the bobcat a rabbit. It’s dry
enough so it doesn’t smell except for ancient
wet wood and gravel, pine pitch, needles. Luckily
a sandhill crane nests nearby so that in June
if I doze I’m awakened by her cracked
and prehistoric cry, waking startled, feeling
the two million years I actually am.
Jim Harrison
2 comments:
Were you at the book launch event on Zoom last night? (Dec. 8th) This was one of the poems that got read. :)
It was a wonderful event and the 4 speakers were great.
Yes, I really enjoyed it, especially the insights from Amy Hundley.
Frohes Neues Jahr, Harvey!
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