Looking for adventure in the wilderness,
the wild that drives us, I am driven to the
head
of the lake and turn the bow of my canoe westward
there,
the distant shore distantly visible and
veiled,
a misty fog lifting, gathering the light, a
stage lit.
My
old ash paddle, dipping, dripping, a rippling wake
trailing
behind, guides me beyond my old weathered
dock,
dry and splint’ring in the passing years’
wear
and tear of sun and water, extending into the lake.
Here,
the water is smooth and the hush of my craft quiet
as
it breaks the surface tension, restoring itself behind me
as
I move onward, passing now a lone birch that hangs
over
Hebron’s edge, lower and lower, year after year,
its
leaves just touching the water, tickling it, perhaps,
a
child’s soft whisper against my ear, barely heard.
And
skirting the last of civilization’s cabins,
I
leave behind these summer homes, their chainsaw noise,
and
children, swimming, laughing, playing, their toys
scattered,
and dogs barking, men, too, barking out to their
broods too eager to listen in
the summer heat and freedom.
Just
past this last domain, a groomed domicile of lawn
and
fresh paint, boats neatly tied and anchored, lies
a
cabin shell collapsed upon itself, broken glass and
humanities’
relics rusting, resting – remembering, perhaps,
-
one last reminder of our impermanence here where we live
subject
to nature’s elements of earth and air, fire and ice,
the
seasons turning, spring to summer, autumn to winter.
The
shoreline now bends around an unseen cove, revealing
where
the wild returns, nature reclaiming itself
with
thickening brush and trees grown together, dense,
blocking
the sun and my view beyond, a lily pad carpet,
and
an osprey’s cry, Red Wing’s flash and the splash
of
frogs, water transformed from winter’s stream
rushing
to summer’s lake and autumn’s marsh, slowed down.
Below,
the rocks lie hidden and flat in the shallows
and
caress my keel, a soft thump, or they rise up,
these
low mountains of stone, boulders centuries old
lapped by the gentle waves wind-stirred in a
breeze
picking up with the sun’s rising higher behind
me, warming me.
Suspended, too, in the depth, trout and perch
and bass,
where salmon spawned once before, a lake
gone fallow,
over-fished and choked by men eager for
escape,
answering nature’s call in the noise and
oil of modern boats,
leaking gas, exhaust, and waste and trash discarded too freely.
leaking gas, exhaust, and waste and trash discarded too freely.
Port side, now, an expanse of water,
rippled and ridged,
an eagle calling, circling, and a loon,
white and black,
be-speckled wings, lifts his head and breaks
the silence
of the morning, his lonely cry warbling,
echo’d from a far off
shore, reminding me of my intrusion, a
stern warning
before he slips below the surface and is
gone
but for the circles left in his leaving;
what remains is the silence, a hushed hint of
a breeze blowing,
what I came for, what we come for, this
wild that calls us,
calling us to the head of the lake, again
and again, to remind us
who we are and where we belong, here,
intruders
allowed to share this space, to glimpse the
wilderness
that lies within us, distantly visible and
veiled.
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