Two Poems by Matthew Dickman

issue681

Found in Willow Springs 68

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Dog

 

I'm hiding from the stars tonight. I've pulled

every blind and turned off

all the lights but one, which I've named after you,

which I can see flooding the dark

hallway of my high school when I open the locker

with your name on it, the only one

left, the universe flashing out

onto the floor. I thought maybe I would find

a note from you

and that's why I dreamt about it. In all the pictures

I've seen of my older brother

he is never wearing a tuxedo. But I have one, bent at the edges,

of me and my twin on a boat, on prom night, happy,

already a little drunk. I carry this picture wherever I fly

so I can look at it right before the crash, below the screams

and the smell of urine, I can look into his eyes

and know who I am. All night I've been worrying

about money and cancer and the tooth

I have to get pulled out before it poisons me. I can smell

the lemon I cut earlier for the carrots and fish. I don't know

what to do with myself. I've written the word Freedom

on a piece of paper and taped it to a knife. Then I peeled it off

and taped it to a book of Myakovsky

poems. Finally I took it and stuck it on the screen

of my computer where there is a picture of Erika wearing the silver

necklace I bought her. Outside a dog is sitting in the yard

looking up a the porch. Every once in a while

it wags its tail and whines, then it's quiet, and then it begins to growl.

 

Halcion

 

You are the illuminated world, floating ballroom, spark and flash,

cold December star above the hospital,

moonlit pond, little boat, your waters calm

as a spoon. I've never been higher.

I can feel you melt on my tongue like a naked girl wearing a diamond

crown, standing barefoot on a bed

of ice, her eyes turning white, her body a cloud broken by lightning,

glowing like a nurse in a dark hall. You turn

all my emergencies into cotton, all my fainting into land, my blue boy

at the bottom of a paper cup, you make the meadow

bright, make me brave. Now I can walk

through the land of strangers and freeways, surgery and rubber gloves,

the panic, the knife, the ambulance of dawn,

the gurney being lifted into the air. When I'm made you lie down

on the metal bed, when the first tube is threaded into me, I want you

my cherry blossom season, my dream of gauze and light, your petals swirling

around my feet, IVs and Jell-O, Tu Fu singing at the edge of the Yangtze forever.

Willow Springs 91

Willow Springs 91

Winter 2023

Poetry

 

EMMA AYLOR

Self-Portrait as Miniature with Mica Overlays

 

BRUCE BOND

in conversation with David Keplinger

Note Left at the Far End of the Street

Note Left in an Echo of the Note Before

 

KERRY JAMES EVANS

Casserole Island

Mississippi Snow

 

RAY GONZALEZ

La Frontera

 

HENRIETTA GOODMAN

The Repetitive Bird

 

HEIKKI HUOTARI

How the Mayfly Got Its Megaphone 2

 

JENNY IRISH

Lupine in Jardin des Plantes

 

DAVID KEPLINGER

in conversation with Bruce Bond

Note Left on the Back of an Antique Mirror 

Note Left in the Hubble Telescope, 1990

 

REBECCA LILLY

Lights Out

 

JULIA MCDANIEL

On a Walk with My Beloved, We Pass a Gingko

Eulogy for a Summer Evening

 

SANDRA MCPHERSON

The Minerals We Are Made of Are Beautiful

Dental Music

 

LIS SANCHEZ

Manuél Sánchez. Seaquake

 

ADAM SCHEFFLER

Advice from a Dog

 

RICHARD SPILMAN

Island of the Beginning and the End 

Tennis with Gulls

 

KAREEM TAYYAR

Request

 

MARC VINCENZ

Fire Tattoo

 

RANDALL WATSON

The Future of Nostalgia

Little League 

Losing the Self

 

J. P. WHITE

Fig & Elephant

Directions in the Northeast Kingdom to a Stand of Wild Apple Trees  

There’s a Problem in the Third Act

 

Poetry in Translation

 

ANZHELINA POLONSKAYA

TRANSLATED BY ANDREW WACHTEL

Стихи войны  

War Poem

Fiction

 

PAUL FARWELL

Meet Me at the Alacaster

 

GARY FINCKE

From the Heart

 

MADISON JOZEFIAK

A Tour of the Mural at the Merari Public Library

 

JEFFREY J. HIGA

The Boy, the Carpenter, and the Risen

 

BEN MILLER

A Slush Lover’s Homily

 

Nonfiction

 

CAROLINE CHAVATEL

American Museum

Interview

JPG Issue Cover

Willow Springs 91 features prose and poetry from Bruce Bond, David Keplinger, and more. Plus, an interview with Brandon Hobson.

Willow Springs 90

Willow Springs 90

Fall 2022

Poetry

 

HUSSAIN AHMED

Myth

Planet

Unmarked

 

RASHA ALDUWAISAN

Confession

 

DAVID AXELROD

Conversation in the Mountains

Twenty Degrees of Declination

Into the Dark

 

NICOLE V BASTA

and thank every hour

prayer

 

DENVER BUTSON

from The Alibis of Scarecrows

rumors

from study guide (to the unofficial history of knife throwers)

“If you are lost”

“Maybe this road”

 

ARAN DONOVAN

After Rain

 

KINDALL FREDRICKS

Are You There God? It’s Me, That Bitch You Gave Lopsided Boobs and Anxiety

 

JAMES GRABILL

The Queen Joins the Banquet

 

JULIANA GRAY

Dementia

 

TOM MCCAULEY

to the active galactic nuclei

 

JOAN MURRAY

To Appreciate Squirrels

 

MATTHEW NIENOW

Getting Off Antidepressants

 

TRIIN PAJA

Etiolate

Summoning

The Early Hours

 

AMANDA MARET SCHARF

Sirius A

 

EMILY SCHULTEN

Dismantling

Motels We Stay in While Trying to Get Pregnant: The Gables

 

MELISSA STUDDARD

Bedazzling the Hummus

 

ELIZABETH TANNEN

Liz Phair, fifteen weeks

Riddle, six weeks

 

FRITZ WARD

from Born

“I left this page blank until it was a white sail”

 

DAVID WOJCIECHOWSKI

Voyage

 

Fiction

 

GREGORY BYRD

White on White

 

ANCA FODOR

The Librarian

 

JASON GRAFF

Voluntary Reader    

 

JULIE INNIS

Dead Dinosaurs 

 

ANTHONY KELLY

The Shovel Story  

 

LAUREN OSBORN

Gossamer Girl

 

Special Feature

 

ALBERT GOLDBARTH

Every seven years we’re completely new cells.

Impossible Flying

John Keats’s Hair

Less

Separate

Terrible, Unfair Burdens

Interview

Goat Cover

Willow Springs 90 features prose and poetry from Joan Murray, Triin Paja, David Axelrod, Anca Fodor, and more.

“The Remainder Salvaged” by Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum

issue681

Found in Willow Springs 87

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Elegy for a Buckeye

 

I went all the way back to the beginning looking for a buckeye giant

On a quiet street in Ohio but it was gone and so were the spiny,

Gold brown husks containing the glossy nuts with circular eyes.

I always kept a buckeye in my pocket for any luck but bad

And rubbed its smooth finish hoping it would shiver me through

My father’s unhappiness with selling life insurance for Metropolitan.

On the way home from school, I would listen to the husks cracking,

The buckeyes falling for squirrels to lug off in their gaped mouths.

Food for winter? Isn’t that our first and last theme? If I had one

Of those buckeyes, I could look into its varnished mahogany burl

And see my father thumbing a buckeye like a miniature football,

Then launching it for a touchdown, my grandparents in Rye Beach,

Barefoot among the buckeyes for the beach and a last nude swim,

My Blue Angel cousin who crashed his jet must have tendered more

Than one in his hands and used it, like me, to steer by when he was

Grounded, and even the coalman conductor on a tight scream clock

Who I waved to every Friday from my bike might have glimpsed

This beauty before he entered the steel mills in Toledo and Chicago,

And thought for a moment he might lean against it some day

And read a book, everyone I knew in Ohio now seedless and distant

From the trees they planted to define them. My memory of all this

Only as old as September and young when compared to the Shawnee

Who named the tree after its nut flicking in a swale like a buck’s eye.

They are gone along with the Delaware and Miami and every other tribe

That ever lived in Ohio where this tree once lived and laid out

Its simple feast or do I have it wrong and the eye of the giant

I climbed and loved still sees what is happening and holds on?

 

Seabooted

 

I looked at my father in his last bed and saw him there seabooted

in the cockpit, holding in his eyes how a hull slips under a wave

without losing its push into weather. He didn’t hear my offerings

from a book he didn’t believe in, so much as the flapping of cloth,

the leaning into it, the splash kick of wake boiling off the transom.

Like any ocean indifferent to suffering, he contained countless wrecks.

On many other nights, I had gone down into his waters to survey

the damage, salvage the proof, imagine some blood payment

I might add to the patina, but on that night, I put aside my vanishing

into the ink of some ancient faded ledger between us and stayed

at the low, wet rail and we made the turn through the eye of the wind

and together found the morning. One of us heard the ocean over the dune.

 

Willow Springs 88

Willow Springs 88

Fall 2021

Poetry

 

ROY BENTLEY

To the Cleveland-Born Woman Who Disguised Herself As a Walk through

Summer in New Jersey

 

JOHN BLAIR

Correct

 

BRUCE BOND

Bread

 

NATE DUKE

Charles, Delete This Voicemail

 

JORDAN ESCOBAR

October Honey

 

FRANK GALLIMORE

Edsel

Appaloosa

 

KATHRYN HUNT

Last Changes

Have I Come to the Wrong Door?

 

DAVID KIRBY

Galileo

The Return of Martin Guerre

Immortal Beloved

 

MELISSA KWASNY

The Week of Moving Glass

The Willow Path

Searching for the Glasses You Dropped in the Creek

Rereading Dion Fortune's Psychic Self-Defense

An Ascetic Impulse Surfaces, Tears Leaves from Their Stems

 

KATHLEEN MCGOOKEY

Even in June

 

SANDRA MCPHERSON

Simple Science

Portraits in My Room

 

PABLO PIÑERO STILLMANN

The Smallest Jar of Mayo in the Known Universe

 

MELANIE TAFEJIAN

Preserved Lemons

 

LYUBA YAKIMCHUK

from Yum and War

Yum appears

making up the enemy

hiding together

how Yum was born

 

GARY YOUNG

"Last night I fell asleep"

"Each moment blossoms"

 

Fiction

 

ROBERT LONG FOREMAN

Darling Frauke

 

AMANDA MARBAIS

Waking Hours

 

WENDY ELIZABETH WALLACE

Labyrinth

Nonfiction

 

ANDREW FARKAS

When Hamburger Station is Busy

 

JEREMY ALVES DA SILVA KLEMIN

A Mental Map of Eastern Europe

 

HOLLY SPENCER

The Crack

 

Interview

88

Willow Springs 88 features prose and poetry from David Kirby, Melissa Kwasny, Gary Young, Sandra McPherson, Lyuba Yakimchuk, Kevin McIlvoy, and more.

Willow Springs 89

Willow Springs 89

Winter 2022

Poetry

 

DAN ALBERGOTTI

We Waited for a Voice

 

E. KRISTIN ANDERSON

Getting Along For Long

 

ANNE BARNGROVER

Princess Mononoke Hits Differently Now

 

THOMAS BRUSH

Belief

 

ELENA CASTRO-OLIVA

Guatemala in a Time During Which I Still Loved Her

 

DORSEY CRAFT

Poem of Frisco the Cat

 

DANIELLE HANSON

Capturing Sky

 

JULIE HENSLEY

Fossils

 

KARAH KEMMERLY

Fernweh

 

ALYSE KNORR

First Human Head Transplant

 

DAVID DODD LEE

Lie Back Down

 

TESSA LIVINGSTONE

Molly, Sleepwalking

 

ANDREW RAHAL

School Night

 

MICHAEL ROGNER

Darwin’s Finches

 

ANDY SIA

Have we met before and before and before then?

 

MICHAEL SPENCE

In Winter: Move and Countermove

 

JOHN STRULOEFF

Alcohol

 

ELIZABETH VIGNALI

Family History

 

MEKIYA WALTERS

Soon We’ll Sell Ourselves for Parts

 

TOM WAYMAN

Poems in Winter

Fiction

 

ANDREW FURMAN

Beneficial Creatures

 

ADAM PETERSON

Zero Nothing Null

 

SIK CHUAN PUA

Hat Yai, 1979

 

NICKALUS RUPERT

Chasing Giants

 

Nonfiction

 

AMANDA GAINES

Polly Pocket Strip Poker

 

MAYA JEWELL ZELLER

Scavenger Panorama

 

Interview

 

ADA LIMÓN

 

Issue 89

Willow Springs 89 features prose and poetry from David Dodd Lee, Nickalus Rupert, Anne Bangrover, Dan Albergotti, and more.

“Fire Artist” by Karl Zuelke

Willow Springs issue 79 cover shows photo of a pink dress against a concrete background.

Found in Willow Springs 87

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OUR FATHER and one of his buddies burned down the lumberyard back in the forties. Grandma told the story a hundred times: "The whole neighborhood was headed up the street toward the commo­tion, and here come Vernon and Richard moving the other way. I knew they was mixed up in it right then." She thought it was funny.

So maybe it's been running in the family. My brother, Phil, the fire artist. Dad the adolescent arsonist.

WE WERE LIGHTING little grass fires, seeing how big we could get them and still stomp them out. One got away, of course, and some­body called the Fire Department. Flames thirty feet high, smoke in brown coils racing for the blue, sirens on the way. It burned itself out in five minutes. A minute before the trucks rounded the corner, Phil lit the field again and we took off. "Shame if they come running all the way over here with nothing to show for it," he told me. We hid out in a tree house peeling open wet Playboys and drying them in front of the fire built on flagstones we hoisted up there. Phil could control a fire when he meant to. We both knew how to do that.

IN THE PORCUPINE MOUNTAINS the bears were thick. One walked through the middle of camp and crapped in front of Curt's tent. There were peanuts and a purple foil granola bar wrapper in it. So we took care and hung the packs properly, and the bears were up the trees all night, swiping at the packs and grunting, frustrated. We saw where they tried to bite through the rope. They watched us from the woods, red eyes sparking back the firelight.

PHIL GOT IN A WRECK on a motorcycle and graduated high school in the ICU. His friend died in that wreck, a good kid too young to be heading off in that fashion. It still hasn't left, that vision of my brother's face—I mean smashed—the wires and tubes, the equipment all whistling. Phil got a pile of money from the settlement. The plas­tic surgeon rebuilt him, and he looked the same. That in itself was amazing. He and Curt went backpacking down a canyon in Medicine Bow that August. Dad couldn't believe it, couldn't think of a thing to say. I don't remember why I missed that trip. An elk tripped over their tent rope and bugled. The stream had deep, clear pools crowded with trout they could see but couldn't catch, so Phil tied an M-80 to a rock. Ethical angling was hardly my brother's forte, but he and Curt had cutthroat trout every meal for six days. They buried the fish in icy patches of old snow that kept them fresh.

WE DID THE SMOKIES A LOT, and once a big sphinx moth flew into the circle of the firelight, eyes glowing like they had electric filaments. It got too close and went down in flames like a little fighter plane. It was dramatic and terrible because it was heavy-bodied and five inches across, and the smell wasn't good. After it happened again, we learned how to pull them away from the flames. We'd see their little red eyes shining as they buzzed in from the woods, then we'd grab them with a flashlight beam and park them safely on our shirts. They sat like gray corsages, vibrating. We each had four or five. Once the fire died down they flew off, one by one.

PHIL DID THE GRILL at Mom and Dad's barbeques and was good at salting and seasoning the roast and cooking it to perfection. He had a feel for how flesh and fire work together. Cooking is the con­trolled breakdown of the molecular structure of food, so it’s all about destruction from the beginning. The art of it is permitting the disin­tegration to only progress so far.

THE THREE OF US MET some Lakota guys in the Black Hills, same age as us. Everyone you meet in mountain country is friendly. East or West, almost always. We hung out a couple days, shared their vodka and our bourbon and cigars and each other's food, and it was great fun. Caught fish, and one guy was deadly on squirrels with a pellet pistol, so there was fresh red meat and plenty of it. Phil cooked up those squirrels, and our Indian friends had to admit that here was a guy with the touch. They told us their tribe's white buffalo woman story around the fire one night, and the moral basically was that you should have a good heart and be respectful of the things that come your way. These dudes could party, but they weren't joking about this. It was easy enough on that night. Spicy pine-roasted squirrel, good company, taking turns sipping a bottle of Four Roses, around and around. The fire all lively, spitting and popping.

WE TRIED OUT TAR HOLLOW in Ohio because we didn't feel like driving so far and we heard it was worth a look, and it was. Great woods, lots of genuine backcountry in the middle of nowhere, good trails, and hills not so high but rugged. And no people. We had good topo maps and needed them. There were spider webs every six feet, the spiders so thick we hiked with branched sticks waving in front of our faces, and they clogged up with the webs, studded with all these thorny little spiders you couldn't flick off because they were buried in the web mass. We stuck the sticks in the fire, and there was this siz­zling white flash for about a second, then the webs melted into goop. When we were hiking Curt pointed to something on a rock and said, "That moss has taken a lichen to that rock," and we heard it five hun­dred times more on that trip, and on every trip after. I still think it's funny. "That moss has taken a lichen to that rock." You'd think you'd get sick of it but somehow you don't.

ONE SPRING just before the leaves opened, me and Phil did a weekend in Red River Gorge, in Kentucky, and it snowed this heavy, wet spring snow. It was beautiful, the soft clumps of snowflakes drop­ping fast, piling up on the heavy evergreen rhododendron leaves next to the lacy green hemlock needles and the cliffs. So lovely, but it did completely soak everything, and it was the one time I ever saw when he couldn't get a fire lit. We tried every trick. Everything was wet. Nothing burned. It was that five inches of warm, soggy snow. He hated that trip and always talked about how sopping wet and miserable it was—we were equipped, it wasn't that bad—but I know it was because he couldn't start a fire. Nothing would catch. I finally said fuck the fire. I walked down to the bank of Swift Camp Creek as it was getting dark, and he was back in camp carving up all these wet sticks with a knife to expose the dry wood inside. I took off my glasses and closed my eyes and put my face up into the strip of quiet gray sky narrowed by canyon walls and let the warm snow sifting down through the tangle of twigs and branches fall all over me. My fleece and Gore-Tex shell were warm, and my feet were dry in my boots, and there was the chill tickle of snowflakes melting on my face, and it was one of those moments you get sometimes when you're out there. Just happy. Blood flowing through your ears.

IT WAS A DRY HOT SUMMER at home, and when you're a fool you assume that's how it's going to stay everywhere. Well, it rained. It always rains in the Smokies. It's the wettest place in North Amer­ica outside of the Pacific Northwest. Curt couldn't find his rain suit because all his stuff was in boxes from moving and getting evicted all the time, so he cut a hole in a garbage bag for his head and two more holes for his arms and that was his rain suit. He went sloshing up the trail in his ludicrous green garbage bag, and he got soaked, and his lips turned dark purple, and he got even slower and denser than nor­mal. We stopped early, stuffed Curt in his tent and sleeping bag, and he was down there shivering like a poodle and getting all sleepy and delirious, worried about Shawnee Indian attacks, then slipping into fog, and it didn't look too good for Curt. Hypothermia is no joke. We got a roaring fire going in the rain and spooned hot instant chicken soup down him and saved his life.

ALL OF US WENT TO COLLEGE, but Curt didn't last. He met a girl and married her with no warning. There was no hope he would graduate. She had grown up in some mean-ass trailer park and want­ed to accomplish more with her life than eight kids before thirty and another trailer. I give her some credit. So why did she marry Curt? Bad judgment. Delusions. Look, he didn't wear a tie at his wedding. He had never worn one in his life, and it's not like it was some kind of statement or anything; it just never occurred to him. One time she hosted a dinner party for all three of us, with our wives, and it was nice, and silly, and there were too many candles on the table, and I felt bad for her. The cooking was unbelievable, but the whole night was still one long la-de-dah until we started telling camping stories. The women rolled their eyes at each other but at least it wasn't Zom­bieland anymore. I'm happy for her sake their marriage didn't last more than a year and a half. She has some good-looking husband now whose whole life she arranges like a vase of chrysanthemums. I see her around now and then and she's nice to me and seems happy to talk. Her daughter is so pretty you have to deliberately drag your eyes away.

BACKCOUNTRY RANGERS in the Smokies carry shotguns they use to shoot feral sows and razorbacks on sight. We were struggling up Eagle Creek, and near the top—boom!—a gun went off and the slug tore through the brush not thirty feet from us. Guns have a bad sound when they're aimed in your direction. Something extra in it. It'll turn your spine to jelly. Before we could yell, a second shot hit its mark, and here this squealing pregnant sow came rolling down the moun­tain and died right next to us. The ranger was a good guy, and he was embarrassed about a near miss with hikers, so he pulled a knife from the sheath on his belt and carved both back straps out of the dead pig, washed the blood off with his canteen, and wrapped them for us in a clean cotton bandanna. That night we were careful to choose maple and hickory for the fire, and we dug up some wild ramps, boiled sas­safras roots for tea, and I hiked halfway back down the mountain and gathered the colony of chicken of the woods mushrooms we had spot­ted earlier. Phil knew exactly how to treat those straps. That was a feast!

PHIL MAJORED IN FINANCE. I majored in biology, then English, then both. We took turns studying in France. We didn't see much of Curt in those years.

THE MOSQUITOES ON ISLE ROYALE were fast, aggressive bit­ers and thick as smoke. Repellent, gloves, and head nets kept them at bay, but you had to lift the net to eat, and you can't put 98% DEET on your lips and eyelids. That’s where they found to bite. Some wolves were after a moose calf. We heard them talking as they hunted in the woods near and around us but couldn't get so much as a glimpse. A great brown gangly cow moose burst out of the pines onto the trail above us, and swung that big long head around, with her red calf trembling between her legs, and it would have been magnificent except that you could see the fear in her eyes, and the poor calf quiv­ering in terror. Do you try to run the wolves off? Good luck with that. The spruce wood campfire that night was bright and flamy and crackly, and we could hear wolves howling.

AFTER HIS MBA, Phil got a position in the finance department of one of the big oil companies and moved to New York, then New Or­leans, then Wyoming, then back to New York, then to Atlanta, then Houston, then New York for the third time.

"What's with fucking New York?" I asked him.

"I hate it. But you go where they tell you." He used his power to fire people. Responsibilities got reallocated according to him. He had a great track record and got noticed.

THE TOURISTY ATTRACTIONS in Yellowstone are ringed with fences, warning signs, and wooden walkways, partly to keep the vacationers safe, partly to keep them from filling the pools with pen­nies and cigarette butts, but most of the fences and warnings were designed by attorneys to preempt lawsuits. Hike fifteen minutes into the back country and there's plenty more hot water, without the fences and boardwalks—geysers, clear hot blue pools, sulfur vapors hissing out of a little hole in a rock. It takes a special kind of crazy to stand at the edge of a thousand-foot cliff with your toes hanging over, but standing at the edge of a hot spring is easy. It doesn't matter that falling into it will cook you as dead as a jump off a canyon wall. Curt was lucky that the stream he tripped into had cooled a bit after flowing a quarter mile across a meadow. His boot protected his foot, but the skin on his lower leg above his ankle turned red and blistered. Phil had tossed a couple plump aloe leaves into the first aid kit, like always, and their juice kept the pain away. In the pool where the hot stream joined the cold one, a dead snake floated, its meat boiled by the volcanic heat it had blundered into.

WE WERE IN THE MOUNTAINS in Montana, and Phil wouldn't pay attention to the plants—these tall parallel-veined plants in the lily family with tiny green flowers. Looked like they grew out of spots where patches of snow had recently melted. He kept knocking the ones in camp over, not on purpose, just didn't notice. "Be careful with those, man."

"Oh, you're right, yeah." But he didn't care. It was just me and him that week because Curt couldn't afford the flight. I needed a break because we hadn't seen a single other person in four days, and wreck­ing those tall fragile lily plants was pissing me off. So I climbed way up the side of the cirque and lay down in the thin grass and watched the shadow of the mountain behind me crawl up the mountain in front of me as the sun set. When it got dark the stars fizzed over the silent sky. I lay for hours just digging them, whirling slow around the black dome of the firmament when suddenly they popped into three dimensions. I wasn't looking at them like paint splattered on a ceiling but was in their midst, in the stars and of them. It was totally mystical. Although I expect anyone with the patience and attention span to lie on his back for three hours in the mountains zoning out on the stars can have this experience. Hardy has Tess talk about the same thing, which is when Angel first notices her. There's nothing special about it and yet there's everything special about it. We're not observers, we're part of it, that's all it means. The wind shifted and some clouds blew in, and I caught a whiff of the cigar my brother was smoking. I worked my way back down to camp in the dark guided by the strange orange glow of the fire five hundred feet below. A cold misty rain started, but he had camp squared away tight. "Where you been?" he said.

HE ORGANIZED TRIPS to Iceland, Italy, Patagonia, and he climbed to the summit of Grand Teton, all while I was grinding my way through graduate school. I went to Alaska with him, charging the expense. You’d think with all the time off he took that he'd get in trouble, but apparently a guy with the know-how and cojones to organize expeditions for the money boys, and sometimes with the power to fire them, and who looks good in a suit in New York City, a guy like that will thrive in an oil company. We hiked up  this valley to a glacier, and there was no color: no green plants, no red plants, no blue sky. No flowers. Just rock, scud, ice, shadow: infinite gradations between dense black and dazzling white. A spruce tree in Denali at­tains a diameter of three inches after a century of growth, but that night he found wood enough for a small, clean fire.

IF YOU ASK A RANGER anywhere in southeast Ohio about moun­tain lions in those big stretches of national forest, they'll clam up and shrug and act like you're dreaming. The rangers know they're there, but it's not official so they won't acknowledge it. There's plenty of deer, surprising miles and miles and miles of nothing but low, rough hills, and vast endless trees, and hardly any people. They're there, though. One followed us all day. We never saw it. Just heard it rustling in the leaves always about the same distance behind, way too close for com­ fort, heard its belly gurgling once, heard something like a cat purring but two octaves deeper, got a ghostly whiff of its dense, musky meat-­breath. And there's that feeling you can't put your finger on, you just know something's back there, your neck hackles tell you. If a cougar doesn't want you to see it, you don't see it. Doesn't mean it's not there. Them eyes burning a hole through your shirt.

CURT HAD A JOB with a tree-trimming company. He was pushing a wheelbarrow piled full of leaves and sticks to the chipper and the wheel caught a branch on the ground. He kept coming, just enough time for a long thin stick to work its way just like that up his shorts, through the flaps of his underwear and right down deep through the slit at the tip of his penis. A one-in-a-million shot. It broke off. He had no health insurance. It took him a year before it hurt bad enough to go to the ER. The laser procedures, surgery, recovery in the hospi­tal, ran him a bill of forty-five thousand dollars. I'd have paid that bill for Curt myself, but I didn't have it. 

PHIL'S WIFE, Rachel—beautiful, intelligent, supportive, accom­plished in watercolors, plays the piano. Willing to move half a dozen times in ten years. When she took the girls and left him, for the usual reason, it was a week after a major promotion. He came clean with me after the divorce." So I burn through women," he said. “Can’t help it." Both his daughters seemed fine with it. I wonder if they knew him better than I did.

SUMMERS WHEN WE WERE STILL KIDS, we'd carry our gear to the big park across the road and set up the old pup tent in the woods where we knew it wouldn't be seen. It was dark green canvas, and had a smoky, mushroomy smell and wooden poles. We would sleep there, sometimes for weeks on end, often with our heads out watching for meteors or inside with rain pattering on the taut fabric. Curt would climb out his bedroom window and join us. We smoked cigarettes, sipped warm beer and bourbon we stole from garages, ate through bags of donuts, and read our Playboys by firelight, comparing what­ ever scant information we could gather about what it meant to be men. I would retell stories from the books I'd been reading. Huck and Jim on the raft. Captain Nemo using treasure for ballast. Boys cast away on an island, the emergence of humankind's innate savagery. All kinds of stuff gets shot at you like flaming arrows, and what they carry ranges from saintly and wholesome to venal and violent. It all hits. What spreads will depend on what's flammable in the target. While those fires lit in him way back then were contained, they kept on smoldering.

CURT NEEDED A SHOT, but the nurse felt there wasn't meat enough on his ass to hold it, so she tried his upper arm, which was worse. She had to run the needle into his thigh.

CLIMBING UP THE VALLEY of Hazel Creek, we were amazed at the height of the trees, eighty, ninety feet before the first branches. We hit this spot where the creek plunged over a waterfall, and it was hot, and we hadn't seen a soul in three days, so we dropped our packs and stripped our clothes off, put our water-shoes on, and waded in the pool below the falls. It was all very sylvan and frolicsome. I looked up, saw this young bear looking down on us, and it walked around the falls and stood next to the pool we were splashing in. Something happened right there. Like, something crossed through the air be­ tween me and that bear, a psychic wind, and I knew the bear wanted to come swimming with us. I was going to let him if he behaved. There's way more to animals than we give them credit for, and I think if you have the capacity for it, the empathy or whatever you might call it, you'll see, and once you catch sight of the spirit for the first time there's no going back. That was my first time. You'd think living with cats and dogs would show most people, but most people either really don't care about them, or they turn their pets into cutesy-poo, so they're blind forever after. My brother turned around, saw this bear standing not fifteen feet away, staring at him, and he about leaped out of his shoes. It’s understandable. He fell backward into the icy water and got up spluttering, and the bear ran off. It looked over its shoulder at us before it was gone, and this is going to sound flaky, but I don't care: That bear's feelings were hurt. It was the funniest thing ever, but there was also a sadness to it. In your whole life you only get a handful of openings like that, and that's if you’re lucky.

YOU DEVELOP A LOVE/HATE RELATIONSHIP with your pack, but Curt lost his. We had all bought them when we were sixteen and seventeen, used them for almost forty years. We got him a new one, set him up with our spare gear, paid his share of the food. He wasn't sick with anything specific, but I'd known him since we were nine. Seemed like he was withering. Lost his thump. We had to take his load on, he barely carried anything. The big wildlife stayed hid, but the little creatures of the Smoky Mountains were there like always, the tiger swallowtails, the Diana fritillaries, the salamanders, the big pink and gray millipedes and the smaller yellow and black ones that give off a sweet smell of cyanide, and there were the same streams clogged with downed trees and round, dark, wet rocks with bright patches of moss, the gurgle of tumbling water, the warm air fragrant with sap and mushrooms, the endless dark and bright shades of concentrated green. Curt got nostalgic about this trip before it was halfway over, and it had to be because he sort of figured it was the last one. He dropped dead at work a month later with a rake in his hands. Just fell over dead. As a memorial gesture, my brother paid off all his bills.

WE WERE IN COLORADO, too high for me. I was sick with the altitude on top of a two-thousand-foot drop off, with the wind blow­ing straight at us but deflected straight up by the cliff face. Here came an eagle from way below riding that wind, wings spread, not flapping, rising straight up and fast. He went tearing by and saw us, and it was one of those moments you can get when you know to stay open for it: absolute astonishment on the face of an eagle. We didn't belong there. But as he rose, my spirit, I suppose you might say, followed after, and the eagle was looking down at me like, sure, come on. You can do this too. I snapped back when I started losing my balance, and he and Curt grabbed me and probably kept me from going over the edge. But, oh gosh. I flew with an eagle—just for a second, but I did it. Anyone can. Eagles fly with their bodies, and we can't do that, but it's all about the spirit, really. The eagle showed me that. I tried to share it, but they just listened politely and shook their heads at me. They both thought I was an airhead anyway, but it's okay. I am. I didn't expect anything different.

HE CAMPED ALONE MORE OFTEN. He still led exotic trips with the execs, but fewer, and he was pulling down more money than ever. But so what? All we know is that he should never have built that fire where he did. If you use these places and don't try to under­ stand them, you make mistakes. The Coast Range in August is not the soggy Appalachians. I try to make myself believe that smoke did the work, not the flames. You can't control where smoke goes. To one with fire in his heart, flame is loyal.

OUR FIRST TRIP EVER was with our dad, in a canoe. I was maybe ten. It rained like crazy, and I can't forget one moment: 4:00 a.m., the worst of the thunder moving past but with lightning still flick­ering above a heavy downpour, the tent leaking like it was made of rice paper, the three of us sitting up shivering at each other through the last of the storm flashes in our wet sleeping bags, miserable as cats in a washtub, and our old beagle dead asleep and snoring like a lumberjack. It was so ridiculous we started laughing. In the morning, eight-year-old Phil took it on himself to get the fire going. He found dry tinder someplace, after a long night of rain, and some live coals under the main log in the fire circle. It was a timid, smoky fire, but he already knew the life of flame and nursed it to strength enough to fry three full pounds of bacon and a whole box of Bisquick pancakes for us and the dog. Thirty years later, Dad said it was still the finest breakfast he ever ate.

THERE WERE THOUSANDS of sassafras seedlings scattered through the understory, so I suggested we might make tea. I told my nieces that since the little plants kept breaking off when we tried to pull them up, it was probably because we hadn't asked the tree for its root, shown it proper respect, and given it proper thanks. If you do that, I said, one might just offer up a root.

Your dad would have been proud to take you camping, I told them. Young women, both. Filled like brooks with the laughter of waters. A nice fat root had given itself up. It was plenty for a pot of tea. We washed it off in the creek and put a pan of water on the fire.

Willow Springs 39

Willow Springs 39

January 1997

Poetry

 

ROBERT GREGORY

Miss Annie Oakley Inside a Cloud of Butterflies  

Two Sisters Who Had Wandered 

Bluish City

 

DENISE DUHAMEL

Tulip

 

MICHAEL STRELOW

A Plague of Frogs 

The Fisherman’s Wife

 

FRANCES RICHY

Wake

 

LEX RUNCIMAN

Thin Air 

Like Men

 

BARBRA DRAKE

Small Favors

 

CARLOS REYES

Heavier Than Air

 

C. G. HANZLICEK

Feeding Frenzies

Bad Habit

 

ROB CARNEY

If I Hadn’t Drowned

 

LAURA KASISCHKE

Dear Earth

 

PETER SEARS

I Might Break, I Might Disappear 

Birds that Beat the Sky to Bits  

Glint

 

LOIS ROSEN

How to Play Wedding

 

JEFF MOCK

Lazarus’s Bed

 

D. NURSKE

Love Affair in the First Weeks of War 

Induction

 

JAMES GRABILL

Staying Alive  

Working With Desire  

As It Rains

 

ROBERT MCNAMARA

Poems from The Injured Coast

 

RALPH WILSON

Giving Blood

 

TOM CRAWFORD

Patriots

Yu Hyeung

Ri Ginkgo Tree

 

LINDA H. ELEGANT

Jackson Hole, 1946

 

ROBERT GIBB

Reclining Nude  

 

HOLLY FLEMING

Let Him Tell the Good Fishing Story

 

Poetry in Translation

 

ALEXANDER KLEIN (translated by LEE SHARKEY)

Search in Alexandrovsky Prison

Cell No. 18

 

SAINT-DENYS GARNEAU (translated by STEVEN REESE)

Portait

 

KATARZYNA BORUN-JAGODZINSKA (translated by KATHLEEN SNODGRASS with JUSTYNA

KOSTKOWSKA)

An Escape 

A Cat

 

Fiction

 

ROBERT ABEL

A Song of Heartbreak and Longing

 

DEV HATHAWAY

Taxidermy

 

H. E. FRANCIS

Talking to Spiders

 

issue391

Willow Springs 39 features poetry, prose, and translation by Robert Gregory, Peter Sears, James Grabill, Tom Crawford, Robert Abel, and more.

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Willow Springs 38

Willow Springs 38

June 1996

Poetry

 

JOHN HAINES

Picture for a Breakfast Room 

Similitude

 

HUGH OGDEN

The Interval

 

MICHAEL STEIN

Gothic Woods

 

ELIZABETH MCLAGAN

Worked Loose by Wind

Winter Stars in a Summer Sunrise

 

JOSEPH GREEN

The Catch

 

J. CAILIN OAKES

Baseball

Flag

 

CHRIS KENNEDY

No Wonder

 

LESLEY DAUER

Home

 

CHRISTOPHER HOWELL

Approaching the Blind Date’s Door

Everything

 

CARLOS REYES

Straw Man

 

BRUCE GUERNSEY

The Sculptor

 

SUE WHEELER

Nonsense

 

RICK ALLEY

I Could Say the Mayfly’s

The Fish Breaking

 

PATRICIA HENLEY

Mining for Clarity

 

MARK IRWIN

Flame

 

JOSHUA MCKINNEY

Traces

Metaphysical

 

ALBERT GOLDBARTH

Three Days: Three Sections

Next 

Some Secret

 

DOUG MARX

Letters to Han-Shan

To the Skull above my Bookshelf

 

ROBERT CLINTON

The Giantess

 

ROBERT HACKETT

My Morning Tour as a Pharaoh 

Almost Cider Time  

 

WALTER BARGEN

The Invention of Flight  

 

KEVIN MILLER

Four Promises 

 

ROBERT HILL LONG

How Forgetting Words in Late Winter

 

Poetry in Translation

 

SERGEY GANDLEVSKY (translated by PHILLIP METRES)

Elegy  

 

THOMAS BERNHARD (translated by JAMES REIDEL

Come under the tree, there the dead 

The night crumples on gates in old walls  

 

INGEBORG BACHMANN (translated by JAMES REIDEL)

One kind of loss 

 

PHILLIPE JACCOTTET (translated by AMY LEMMON

The Secret 

 

DANTE ALIGHIERI (translated by SETH ZIMMERMAN)  

The Inferno: Canto V 

 

RAINER MARIA RILKE (translated by STEVEN LAUTERMILCH)

Postmark: Ragaz, 24 August 1926

Vachel Lindsay Poetry Award

 

MARGARET LLOYD

Red Dress

Willow Springs Poetry Award

 

GWYN MCVAY

In the Dirt

Fiction

 

JONATHAN JOHNSON

Driving Plow

Willow Springs Fiction Award

 

ALLISON GREEN

Half-Moon Scar

Interview

CHRISTOPHER HOWELL

issue38

Willow Springs 38 features poetry, prose, and translation by Christopher Howell, Jonathan Johnson, Joshua McKinney, and more. The issue also includes Margaret Lloyd’s “Red Dress,” winner of the 1996 Vachel Lindsay Poetry Award, Gwyn McVay’s “In the Dirt,” winner of the 1996 Willow Springs Poetry Award, Allison Green’s “Half-Moon Scar,” winner of the 1996 Willow Springs Fiction Award, and an interview with Christopher Howell.

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Willow Springs 37

Willow Springs 37

January 1996

Poetry

 

CLAUDIA KEELAN

Chaff

 

KIM ADDONIZIO

Near Heron Lake 

At Moss Beach

 

COLLEEN MORTON

Blackbird

 

NIKKI HERSST

Binoculars on a Tattooed Lady

 

PHILLIP ST. CLAIR

Into the Cave

 

NAOMI SHIHAB NYE

Cape Cod

 

DAVID AXELROD

Crossing the Mountains at the New Year

 

MARINA PILAR GIPPS

Drive

 

DAVID ROMTVEDT

Planting

 

ED HAWORTH-HOEPPNER

Bonneville Dam

 

JOHN PALMER

Goal

 

JACQUELINE BERGER

In the Frame of the Hillside

 

MICHAEL VAN WALLEGHEN

Two Seizures

 

PETER COOLEY

For Arthur Dimsdale

 

JAN STREVER

One Foot Planted While the Other One Roams

 

JACK BARRACK

Digging

 

TIMOTHY LIU

Across the River

 

BRAD RICHARD

Clown

Queer Studies

 

SUSAN EISENBERG

Depression

 

TAYLOR GRAHAM

J.J.’s Truck Stop  

 

CHRIS FORHAN

Without Presumptions

An Honest Forest

Pine, Pine, Pine   

 

KHALED MATTAWA

I Was Buried In Janzoor

 

MICHELLE BYRNE

Silence

 

JAMES FINNEGAN

A Loon Diving 

 

RON JOUCHIN

I Sit at Home Naked  

 

SALLY THOMAS

Love poem, West Memphis 

The Last Day  

 

ELIZABETH KIRSCHNER

Lullaby 

 

MEGAN SEXTON

Lastochki 

 

GEORGIA TIFFANY

Playing School 

 

JAMES GRABILL

The Unanswering Will Go Unanswering

 

Fiction

 

LESLIE PIETRZYK

My Grandmother’s Rosary

Review

 

JOSHUA MCKINNEY

Unprepared in Earnest: on Keelan, Shapiro, and Gander

AWP Intro Award Winners

 

DEBRA DEAKIN

Screech Owl in Symphony  

 

VERNON FOWLKES, JR.

Small Absence  

 

CHRISTIAN ROSENSTOCK

Taking the Life Out  

 

JESSE MILLNER

Hymns  

 

AMY HICKMAN

Cyprus: A Fragment 

 

ERIK SIMON

Waiting for the Deacon  

 

KATHLEEN HEIDEMAN

Van Gogh’s Priest

issue37

Willow Springs 37 features poetry and prose by Kim Addonizio, Chris Forhan, James Grabill, Leslie Pietrzyk, and more, and a review by Joshua McKinney.

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