Archive for Poems – Page 2

With This Wreath

With This Wreath by Paul J. Willis      for Sojourner Kincaid Rolle With this wreath we thee crown poet laureate of our town. Wear it lightly, hold it fast; for our city make it last. But should it wither, as it will, remember you’re a poet still. —from Losing Streak

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Hollow Again

Hollow Again by Paul J. Willis (Quercus agrifolia) Look at this trunk, burnt hollow,      keyholed from side to side.           Yet, in spite of a few dead limbs,                a crown of leaves pushes against the patient sky. So we might      flourish, in spite of ourselves,           evacuated of fortitude. Paul                said it: in weakness, strength; in death, […]

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Pribet

Pribet by Paul J. Willis The nursery at the foot of the hill does not sell privet—it sells pribet. As if the hedge were a croaking frog in a bend of the ribber. Eberything I know suggests they hab got it wrong, but I pay cash for my fibe-gallon bucket of pribet, dribe home, dig […]

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No Competition

No Competition by Paul J. Willis The high-strung net behind home plate is softened by some wisps of lichen. Year by year the tufts grow deeper, filamenting, elfin beards that strand our view. Eventually, all we’ll see is the double play of algae and fungi, a gray-green wall that separates us from the field but […]

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Listen

Listen by Paul J. Willis A lake lies all alone in its own shape. It’s not going anywhere. A lake can wait a long time for a hiker to come and camp on its shore. It will reflect the moonlight, give him a drink of pale silver. Toward dawn, the wind might ruffle it a […]

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Piano

Piano by Paul J. Willis The summer you were seven you could hardly sleep that night before your first recital. “I’d rather break my arm,” you said. Which is what you did with an hour to spare. We could blame the dog who chased you into the glass door, but that would be dumb. A […]

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Bearpaw Meadow

Bearpaw Meadow by Paul J. Willis Incense cedar, elderberry, scattered chapels of white fir. Cones stand up like paper squirrels on the branches, waxing resinous in sun—light of the year yet lingering with warmth in plenty, here, now, an afternoon in folded grass and browning nests of bracken under broken granite, lucid sky. Stillness after […]

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Seed Money

Seed Money by Paul J. Willis (Pinus monticola) The first white pine of the morning is holding up fistfulls of dollars, currency of June-green cones, ready cash soon to be invested in land, far-flung properties ripe for speculation, bonds that grow, yielding interest that never ends.                                   Compared to this, the silver coins of aspen leaves […]

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Ambition

Ambition by Paul J. Willis One oar, then another, stirs the water. Ripples gather at the prow, a wake appears. You watch them as if they measure destiny. This takes a life. Finally you learn to drift. The horizon is enough to see on every side. A boat will carry you where you are. —from […]

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Curlieu Falls

Curlieu Falls by Paul J. Willis Mid-May in the Sierra— this is when the water knows to fling itself from cliffs and ledges, spray through chartreuse alder leaves. Then it curls in granite channels, licking the moss, and calms the shade below the live oak terraces, the bleeding heart, the nodding heads of saxifrage. —Sierra […]

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