
Courtesy of Jasperdo/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 DEED).
We went on a 12-sparrow walk
so I could teach my soul to speak.
(Jim Harrison said this
is the language of poetry.)
(Few things scare me as much as the word “soul.”)
We climb No-Name Trail until the coastal ridge
in some silence,
to give our hearts their full retinue
and because we have run out of things to say.
I do not look back like my favorites
from ancient tales. We climb
down before we climb up –
whether you prefer to begin with hill or speed
says as much about you as the test
that showed I perceived and judged
in equal measure.
Measured, measured and found wanting.
No balladeer will record these sagas, lined
in artichoke thistle
and prickly pear cactus a little poison oak
and we don’t lie
to the tourists who ask, almost there?
They may be confused angels.
We point them toward horizon
which shares nearly everything with orison,
an ancient word for prayer
I find hard to
(and therefore do not) pronounce.