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Issue 82
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Devi / Ali
- Colin Bailes
- Emily Banks
- Parcerisas / Cassells
- Laura Dixon
- Odio / Ekiss
- Isaac Ginsberg Miller
- Donnelly / Miller
- Mitchell Glazier
- Jessica Goodfellow
- Grotz / Sommer Translations
- Todd Kaneko
- Keineg / Marris
- Elizabeth Onusko
- Colin Pope
- Karen Poppy
- Candiani / Portnowitz
- Elizabeth Ai Powell
- Mike Puican
- Anthony Tao
- Angela Narciso Torres
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BOOK REVIEW
- David Rigsbee reviews Swift: New & Selected Poems
by David Baker
- David Rigsbee reviews Swift: New & Selected Poems
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ESSAY
Issue > Poetry
Shore Wood Hills, After Thirty Years
For Chris
I have tried to listen. The trees whisper how alive.
How did you find me?
Once, thirty years ago, a tall oak thrashed your window,
looked in on us, so young, on the carpeted floor, conceiving
another and ourselves out of the moon
dappled oak shadow. All the lake's boulders
below us sang their greeny moss, great answers
in an aria of cells, rings, fungi into tree
root, vast networks they connect heaven to earth.
The oaks and pines and prairie once loved me
into a kind of extinction, a stripping away
like a bear pulls bark. It scared me
so I walled myself in. I keep crying
because I thought you meant nothing
to me then. That the world meant nothing.
My distress was the shrill, horrible sound
of buzz saw. How I wouldn't speak to you or let you
come with me to the clinic not far from right here.
I didn't want you to think you had to stay
just because our child sprouted in me.
Now look at you.
Child or no child the oak holds
that spirit from us, what's underneath
still connects us, a halo of roots, mycelium nets.
These trees arching their bodies
over us with their long discussions about time.
These trees moving toward the light,
which is also toward each other,
felled yet live again, bloom great bowls and blossoms.
How to be quiet enough to ask the canopy
above us like a tunnel over our stunned
middle age. I reach for the broken world. I reach
over to touch your arm, the long limb
of you. The oak calls like God through time:
I recall the girl I was and still am,
all thick with sap and leaf and hubris.
I arrived here, un-Daphned myself back to you.
I have walked their mazes, with my dog
to find the map of this world of zygote, oak, and root.
How did you find me?