Archive for Contemporary Poetry – Page 5

Bleeding Heart

Bleeding Heart by Paul J. Willis (Dicentra formosa) Finally, a flower after my own.      You there, hanging in unashamed bivalve clusters      at the feet of ancient cedars. So few of them left, you know.      Is that what breaks you? Is that what makes you wear your sweet pink      ventricles on your green sleeve? —Rockport State […]

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Pyramid Creek

Pyramid Creek by Paul J. Willis Clearest stream, you wander here      from gravel bed to gravel bed,           napping in pools along the way. You lave the roots of dusky cedars,      leaning with age, and reassure them           they have many years to leave. Thick green moss describes your banks,      saplings of hemlock, little hands           of soft […]

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Western Trillium (II)

Western Trillium (II) by Paul J. Willis (Trillium ovatum) Trillium, like a spawning salmon you turn red before you die, an emblem of your sacrifice for what comes next: all for the seed, all for the silver fin of a petal. —North Cascades National Park —from Deer at Twilight: Poems from the North Cascades

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Madrona on the San Juans

Madrona on the San Juans by Paul J. Willis (Arbutus menziesii) Madrona, that strip tease of yours      is working again. The way you pearl out of your bark, following your natural      bent, turns my head in smooth surprise. Your arms reach over the bay with longing,      that supple skin, slightly sunburned, blooming like a dusky […]

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Menzies’ Larkspur

Menzies’ Larkspur by Paul J. Willis (Delphinium menziesii)     Larkspur, are you sure         you wish to fly, cobalt comet in the sky?     Bluest blue,         sweet eye of mirth, why don’t you come down to earth? —North Cascades National Park —from Little Rhymes for Lowly Plants

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Here and There

Here and There by Paul J. Willis (Platanus racemosa) The ivory of sycamore in the winter morning sun for just an hour. But what a shine. We too stand up, illuminated, in the valley of the shadow, losing leaves, and that’s a sign our roots are meant for higher ground; though we may grow as […]

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Autumn Ginkgo

Autumn Ginkgo by Paul J. Willis (Ginkgo biloba) Little leaves like ochre moths, neatly rising on the stem, you will have one chance to fly, separated, then amen. If we borrow your slight wings, waving temporary hands, we can hope in air to sail not our own, but other lands. If we stay upon the […]

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