The map has led me to this unsought future
but I’ve come to cosset its every unfolding
like an aging cottonwood learns to curl its roots
around the creatures born in the forest loam
Still   in the starlight of dreams   I often return
to that course I used to wind through the rural Midwest
& immerse myself again in late summer’s haze
of primroses   columbines   & great hay rolls
all drowsing along the twilit roadside   I drive
past the cornstalks’ muggy throngs reaching
their nascent fingers to wrest the last sun-drops
from the dome’s milky yawn   until the oaks
grow drunk with nightfall   & the winged hosts
soused among their leaves all break into song
to wake me to my life
           a map on its head:
East has become west   & west east
for the Northern Lights always inviting
themselves to swim on my horizon
Though I’d have once been glad to drown
in the luminescent breath of such interlopers
I now see their hold on me was only fleeting—&
that tonight’s reverie was no more solemn   nor less
gratuitous   than it was to mistake the crackle from
my gas fireplace I must have dreamed
for a memory
 
photo by Ellen Schoenmaker
 
              
          
            
          
          
          
  
  
  
  
  