Archive for Spiritual Poetry – Page 3

Vacation Condominium

Vacation Condominium by Paul J. Willis The mirrors on opposite walls present us to ourselves in regression, as if going back in time to rooms we used to occupy. The people there are bewildered to be so small and distant, dismayed to be merely former selves. So they wave us back into their diminishing frames […]

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Starry Solomon’s Plume

Starry Solomon’s Plume by Paul J. Willis (Maianthemum stellatum) Starry, starry Solomon’s plume, your constellations float in clusters lowly wise, zig-zagging asterisks of light, reminding thick and shaggy cedars, though they breach the nether skies, that even smallest things may be arrayed on earth as they are in heaven. —North Cascades National Park —from Deer […]

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Racer

Racer by Paul J. Willis (Coluba constrictor) Racer, you erase yourself      when I step near. The first I know, you’ve flung      a fluid curve of tail, that olive muscle,      down the rocky mountainside in a matter of course,      a maze of motion. —Ross Lake National Recreation Area —from Deer at Twilight: Poems from the North […]

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Applegate Paintbrush

Applegate Paintbrush by Paul J. Willis (Castilleja applegatei) Did you paint the sunrise      over on Jackita Ridge? If so, you forgot      to wash the tips of every one of      your bracts and blossoms. —Pasayten Wilderness —from Deer at Twilight: Poems from the North Cascades

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Wood Violet

Wood Violet by Paul J. Willis (Viola glabella) Yellow wood violet,      I don’t deserve you.           Does anyone? The way you line      both sides of the path           above the creek, leading upward      from shade to sun,           makes me think of you as ushers to a new redemption.      Each spring, a second chance.           And a third. And […]

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Deer Bones

Deer Bones by Paul J. Willis Funny how the inside of a femur looks just like sponge cake. But bones to dust and dust to soil and soil to seed and seed to stalk and stalk to grain and grain to meal, I will eat that cake someday, that sponge cake with the frosting of […]

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Dry Creek

Dry Creek by Paul J. Willis Dry Creek, that you are not.      The trail walks a checkered log across your rapids. Yesterday      I stood in the snow where you began, white as the foam that courses      now through moss, through boulders, under the cedars and the hemlock      to the gray, impassive lake. I think I […]

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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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