Appalachian Ground

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Appalachian Ground Page 5

by Lisa Creech Bledsoe


  and celebratory rockstacks

  to be enjoyed by all

  Five silver spoons

  (my great-grandmother's)

  filled with and spilling honey

  at the seep for bees

  And the kittens — a year old now!

  have a new white ribbon

  dangling from the doorknob

  There's one fluttering on the ridge as well

  which might capture the bobcat's gaze

  Under the boundary tree

  for the coyote I've left

  my best, trickiest riddle

  And there are ten well-washed

  grapes on the neighbor's property

  for the raccoon

  with a line of cat food showing the way

  The wild cherries, goosefoot, ironwood

  hickory, ash, witch hazel, well

  there are as many hugs as can be arranged

  yellow buckeye, beech, maple

  one hundred fifteen thousand heartbeats of gratitude

  today especially

  for winter heat, green summer shade

  and the deep, fragrant

  breath of the woods

  And finally

  the deer receive forgiveness

  for eating my blueberries;

  next spring I will plant more

  V. Maps of Light

  Clearing the Seep

  Late in the afternoon I went out to clear the clots of leaves from the seep, where it threads down the mountain into the pool we built for it not far from the house.

  Snow is coming in tonight but right now the sun has a golden ferocity that calls for a surge of deep-hearted work. I find the round-point shovel, then dig through the box for my yellow deerskin gloves, the ones that are so agreeable and supple, and fit me better than they do the men I live with. In the clearing below the house the crows are arguing amiably.

  Heading out of the shed my boots crunch on muddy gravel; tomorrow it will be icy and treacherous. The wind is already churning through the trees like a kettle coming to boil. But for now there is sharp pleasure in dragging away the matted slags of black and ochre leaves until I can see the last of the light glitter off the water as it trickles down.

  I dredge the leaves out of the pool, then sweep the muddied water along the channel with my shovel until it finally tips past and slips down the mountain, all surge and tumble and perfect satisfaction. I watch until my ears begin to burn with cold.

  Sometimes your path is so clear and keen it aches. Sometimes — just for a moment — your way is bright as molten copper burning its way down, reflecting the cup of the world as it runs. Even the earth is inflamed and swept along.

  Back at the shed I put away my shovel, then gather up an armload of wood to build a fire for the night. It’s dark inside now, but I do not yet want to turn on a light.

  To Life

  When light floods down

  in the temple of the woods

  there is work:

  bright chemistry of sugars

  simmered, bloomed, perfected

  freely passed and shared

  stem to root

  from the holy cup

  swallowed

  in great draughts

  And the leaves say:

  let us drink together

  let us dry the cup

  may you be delivered to life

  The tree is blind to one color

  which is laid aside

  trundled up to the roof

  tipped out the windows

  kept out of the way

  of the busy kitchen and

  long table of the leaf

  How blessed we are that green

  — sage, emerald, viridian, pine

  is of no use to the tulip poplar

  shagbark hickory or yellow buckeye

  Now breathe and

  bathe in the sanctuary of green

  birch and basswood

  and love well the gift

  And the people say:

  let us drink together

  let us dry the cup

  may you be delivered to life

  Spider Flight

  Sixty miles out to sea Darwin

  looked skyward and saw silver

  filaments fringing every

  rope aboard the ship

  Spiders fly because they are pushed

  Not wind

  but charge propels them aloft

  Every day along the edges of the planet

  four hundred thousand storms

  brew and prowl, crackling

  Skyships amass

  thin fire strikes and

  sleet hisses down

  A spider turns her gaze to the earth

  stands on tiptoe

  and spins up a thread

  Electric stormjuice squeals

  and streams

  Ions careen earthward

  are repelled and

  Eight delicate feet

  hundreds of thousands of tiny contacts

  with grass, twigs, roofs of the world

  Vanish

  Are bounced

  into green winds

  to fly

  toward unknown lands

  Ode to Brown

  cinnamon, nutmeg, loam, dusk

  beans, molasses, gingerbread

  oatmeal, rye bread, rolling pin

  toasted sesame seeds

  a weathered wooden boat, jump rope, apple butter

  old paperbacks crumbling in the attic

  my father’s boots

  mushrooms, pecans, homemade bread

  dried cornhusk dolls we brought home from the Ozarks

  a hummingbird nest, tiger’s eye

  the prickly sweetgum balls, stepped on barefoot

  rotted plums from the neighbor’s tree

  nightcrawlers, dried blood, Coca-Cola in glass bottles

  a pond the cows have been in

  gravy, biscuits, pralines

  the wren who sat on my grandpa’s shoulder

  my mother’s Volkswagen Rabbit, first car I ever drove

  my worn-out basketball

  hot tea in Mussie’s Haviland china,

  Ohio River Flood of 1937 and

  the sepia-toned photos of people who lived and loved through world wars

  the smooth skin of my grandaddy’s housemaid,

  and our last president

  the kitchen carpet at Graceland the day Elvis died

  empty locust shells we hung in our hair

  rough speckled muscadines slowly covering the abandoned house in the woods

  round pebbles at the bottom of the Spring river, paddles, faded life jackets

  the tarp draped over the canoe that we slept under

  crickets

  my carved cherry bed

  the metal bookcase in my room,

  with all my Nancy Drews

  my little sister’s chifforobe

  Bonnie Bell lip gloss in Tootsie Roll flavor

  root beer barrels, Milk Duds, Twix bars at Halloween

  lizards, snakes, salamanders

  School shoes, hush puppies, peanut butter

  Nutty Bars cost a quarter in the lunchroom

  the ribbon in my Heavy Metal cassette tape, re-wound with a No. 2 pencil

  my boyfriend’s thick, wavy hair

  Stuck

  once I wandered

  into the woods and discovered

  a secret cave which sighed and

  stirred the hair on my neck

  I found the cave because I wandered

  yet

  in all the wide world

  there is a strange phenomenon

  in which I allow a single pebble —

  any random small-focus point, really

  to not only serve as editor and critic

  but also a sucking black hole

  a lockup

  I focus on this and nothing else

  in all the wide world I allow

  one small

/>   — cannot even name

  to decide what I am to do

  where I will go

  what I may or may not express

  I have only the tiniest cell in which to pace

  and I have gone there myself and

  infuriated

  locked myself in

  this is how wandering ends

  what we do to ourselves

  this is how we miss

  the secret caves in the woods

  Thresholds

  This may happen to you:

  You may have an orderly house built in your heart, yet be unexpectedly, powerfully distracted by thresholds.

  Doorways shine so hot and blue I have to shut my eyes and turn away.

  Or go out, of course.

  If you go, you’ll find yourself dropping your hands and saying “I just don’t know,” then listening to the sometimes ridiculous, often profound secrets the water has to share. You’ll miss meetings because of this, and have no excuse.

  You might be taught by the most unsavory birds, and become known as a lover of weeds.

  After a while there won’t be much left to recommend you any more, no clarity or cleverness. You’ll be a fool who lingers on the fringes of burnt places and ruins. You will curse and bow in the rain and stand amid an argument of winds. The land will tease and trick you. But if you take off your shoes, it will tolerate your feet.

  You’ll be an odd friend to an unpredictable power.

  It will be more than this. It will be enough.

  On the Last Small Bouquet of Gentian and Boneset

  I had saved this for you these past weeks

  or perhaps for myself

  Thinking, there may not be any more this season

  or the next

  Then today on my walk there were

  fragrant mosses in citrine and jade and amber

  leaves with their thousand songs

  and burning filaments of light

  quilting the surface of the creek

  This is how we become who we were meant to be

  Not by clinging to a few bright gifts

  but by letting go and having them all

  Riptide

  dreamt I was

  standing on the beach when

  a wave reared up

  and dragged me impossibly

  out to sea

  breathless

  a woman gulped my name

  roar of a towering whitecap

  coming

  and — !

  knew what to do

  slipped under

  satin black leagues beneath

  terrible sharp-toothed birds of the deep

  howled but

  fed them stones and stones

  waited

  for the wave to thunder past

  then winded

  aligning my salt-light body with the shore

  began

  the oblique journey back

  thinking of book signatures, bees, woodfires

  you know what to do

  wrap your fear in stones

  angle toward the shore

  the brine in your blood

  knows what to do

  There Will Be Days

  There will be days during which your heart feels like an abandoned house at the end of a long gravel road.

  You shouldn’t go there, but you do, furtively. Anxiously. You have no business there, but the trash and detritus of squatters — a mattress, empty tins, worse — these call for a witness.

  What you don’t expect, of course, is love.

  To be ambushed, laid low, crushed to the grass by the intoxicating scent of muscadines growing wild.

  The clicking (what? what?) of your stuttering heart — or the cicadas which have climbed out of the dirt after seven years in the grave, croaking in astonishment.

  This is the beginning of grief, this place of shattered glass and exposed boards.

  Or the awakening of love? Is that it?

  So hard to distinguish between them, and possibly not worth the effort.

  The Same House

  Does the steadfast root tell the leaf

  Be still and do not pull so in the wind!

  The leaf shivers and laughs

  at the root's imperious command

  She chortles in response

  You, root! Why don't you bump and sail the sky

  like I do?

  The tree loves them both and more

  You, leaf, will visit your older sister

  after the throat of the snow carries you down

  and the wild wood conveys you

  piece by piece

  vein and flame

  into the bright singing under

  We live in the same house but

  we will all be changed

  Measured

  Today I added myself to a flash flood warning

  a mudslide, and thirty sheets of honeycomb

  pressed into frames.

  I can’t open the hives in this downpour but flowed onto

  a page of washi and a handwritten poem.

  I became a cherry tree two hugs wide

  dying and holding on,

  the ash leaning above the seep,

  and five black locust skeletons streaked with rain.

  Silvering into mist I pooled among the pines

  with three other women whose sons all suffered.

  You and I want the same things:

  To know the worst and be free of it.

  To sustain the terrible wounds and still sleep like a wolf

  with her nose on her paws.

  To remember our infants with their peony heads.

  We must break ourselves into equal birds,

  into seven shining stones in shades of slate

  and jet and jade

  ten little eggs

  four promises

  reduced in the end

  to a galaxy with a thousand suns

  falling into our hands,

  still burning.

  Begin Again

  I was satisfied with grocery-store bouquets until I discovered wildflowers. Now I know how the strong, dappled leaves of hepatica live through the winter, then die in the spring snow to make way for one perfect bloom with the sheen of a pearl.

  The suburb kept me until I saw a spotted thrush return each afternoon to the same mountain meadow, singing until robins filled the long grasses to feed.

  Now amid yellow buckeye, trillium, trout lily, and the parliaments of crows… The way creek song changes in pitch after a rain? I can never go back.

  The threads you painstakingly knot together each day unravel. Holding lovers, molding sons, repairing and hoping. When you are sewing the world together there are more broken pieces than whole.

  There will come a time when you unhunch and unfold your aching hands. Stand on the worn wooden boards, the cold cement stoop, a patch of dirt — maybe a little grass. Just stand until you remember the ground will support you.

  Stand for a month or four years.

  The wild turkeys will feed on wood violets while you wait, and the birches will raise your children. Drink your tea, the towhee will urge.

  Then a honeybee needs to be rescued from the seep, and you will need to find a twig. Take your time, this is a test. This is how you will begin again.

 

 

 


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