The earth is
held together
up here with
cedar roots,
with hickory roots
and the constant hope
of no rain.
The red-shale soil
loves to wash
itself,
down
to the ravine below
becoming silt for the Tohickon Creek -
the Deer-bone Creek.
The dirt is
made up here
with the slipping
and the sliding of rock;
on rock;
stone against stone
and rain on earth.
The pounding and the force
makes dirt of the stone.
Creeping along in
the fingers of the rain
the dirt is grabbed,
the dirt is pushed
along the roots that cling
tightly to life
and to the vertical growth.
The earth is
held together up here,
by cedar roots,
by hickory roots,
and the constant hope
of no rain.
Poems of longing and attachment from this side of the JOURNEY, with an eye toward the Other-Side. All of the poems here were written by N. Thomas Johnson-Medland. Feel free to use them as you wish, just credit the author and send me a copy. tomjohnsonmedland@gmail.com
"The Author-Preneur with Something To Say That You'll Love To Read." #authorpreneurTJM
Showing posts with label erosion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label erosion. Show all posts
Stones and Moss I
I am captured by the stones.
The way they sit there -
piled and scattered -
in and out of relation
with each other.
The mosses can fold themselves,
if they like,
over the stones,
making mortar of themselves
for mounds of shifting rock.
They hold me, too.
I sit here,
I sit here,
among them,
and am unable to move;
sucking in the sun
and the rain
and the water
and listening to time pass with the moon -
Wondering how it all has
come together.
Have the rocks
and moss themselves
been arranged in such a pattern,
or do I, in my seeing, arrange them
or do I, in my seeing, arrange them
in what appears to be a pattern –
even when scattered loosely
like debris. Do their forms exist in
any real way other than the way
I think I see them.
The Mid-life Poems # 3 - ALLUVIAL FANS
Fans spread out at
the base of the hills-
the base of our days-
escarping debris
deposited over time.
The force –
always down
hauls all sort of silt
from the face of the
highlands to the foot
of the lowlands
Down,
always down falls
all that has died,
all that has decayed
and lost its grip.
It falls and is
washed away.
Are the things we
love really lost or
are they moved –
down, always down –
away to the pit
of our erosion.
Those pieces that have
washed away –
our youth,
our trust,
our freedom to be naïve.
Are they gone or
simply out of sight –
reaching out from
the basin of our days.
The nutrients and minerals
from the mountain
seed the basin
in a downward rush.
The mountains and
the hills laid low - a time
cast collaboration of the
prophets and erosion;
everything leveled.
Fingers of the mountain
stretch out
hoping to pull her along
the earth,
to widen her presence
along the surface. We
grow like this. All that runs
off of us produces chains
and foothills. Our life
touches another by the
build up of silt and alluvial
wear. It moves away from
our core. Then, lifetimes
later, the foothills of our
days spawn foothills and
are themselves carried away.
All things become one
as the work of time
spreads out the mountains,
bringing them all to the ground,
to the earth from which
they came.
The mountains and the hills
laid low.
Labels:
aging,
alluvial fans,
change,
compromise,
decay,
erosion,
geology,
mid-life
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