Greetings, poetry lovers!
Here’s a poem I wrote during my family’s Easter weekend visit to the lodge at Longmire, Washington, up on a flank of Tahoma (Mount Rainier). Clumsy and ungainly, not really edited, but I’m not sure I want to change it all.
LONGMIRE
I belong with the trees
that I don’t come up to their knees
and I don’t give a toss
with my toes walking in the thick moss.
I find a branch for a walking stick–
that’s the kind of thing that makes me tick.
How I love to take walks
among glacial deposits of rocks.
When I hear a raven croak
I laugh at the private joke.
I hear the frogs call at dusk
by the pond that smells of sour musk.
What a noise the river makes!
My teeth chatter, my whole body aches.
Eye to eye with a cloud
and my heart beats loud.