Mark Zegans |
Marc Zegans is a poet and creative development advisor. His previous collections of poems include, The Underwater Typewriter, and Pillow Talk. Taconic is from Marc Zegans’s newest collection, Boys in the Woods, a limited handmade edition from Crane Maiden Books. It can be purchased at : http://www.pegsimone.com/storep3/Boys_In_The_Woods_by_Marc_Zegans.html
WALK
he’d
never been in forest thicker than stars
when
we turned off the grey, moonlit clay road
into
the cool black of trembling leaves
a
congress of tiny whisperers, voices
fluttering
down from the canopy
foreshadowing
the physical descent
in
the days following frost.
“it’s
so loud,” he said, reaching for my hand.
“it’s
so loud…and dark, and quiet and loud
and
I can feel the rocks through my sneakers.
I
can’t see anything, but I can feel.”
“what
can you feel?”
“the
rocks and the air.”
“what
does the air feel like?”
“cool
on my arm.
on
my face it feels like a soft blanket.
and
under my feet I can feel the rocks.
some
of them are very gig, an other
will
make me trip if I run over them.
I
think we need to walk very slowly.”
“I
think you are right.”
“and
we need to feel.”
“what
do we need to feel?”
“the
space around
our
hands and our fingers and our bodies.
so
that we don’t go crashing into trees
or
go falling down a cliff in the dark.
“how
dark?”
I
have not seen this much dark
I
cannot see you. I cannot see my hand.
I
do not think I can see the forest.
maybe
we are part of the forest?
is
the noise in this place the sound of god?
do
you think god lives here in the forest?
I
think maybe we are hearing him breathe.
let’s
walk slowly and be very quiet…
just
so you will know, I am not scared.
I
think not seeing is not a problem.
I
like not seeing as we start to walk.
I
can smell the lake. it’s right down below.
I
can smell great big rocks. we’re near a cliff.
if
we move up the hill we will not fall.
look
right there, you can see very dark trees.
dad,
do you think we are finding a clearing?
I
think we might be. let’s see if we are?
look!
we can see stars now in the forest.”
he
stood giant-eyed, counting countless stars
his
blond hair washed white in the moonlight
slowly
turning circles, until he yawned
placing
his hand once again in mine
as
we entered forest thicker than stars
walking
now with the knowing of place
that
arrives only once in a boy’s life.
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