Friday, May 22, 2015

May Ruination

I went on a very enjoyable boat trip a few weekends ago in the Delta Clearwater River of Alaska. It is  a beautiful place, certainly worthy of a visit. I wrote this poem afterward:

May Ruination

This is the Delta Clearwater—a river merging
into the Tanana and eventually, by way of opposing
currents introduces a lake. Transparent liquid
blankets rounded river rocks, flowing onward.

This river holds the clearest water
I’ve ever seen, my shadow in the shallows as the sun shines down realizing, today
is subtly impressive

I paddle onward, until meeting the waters
that for nearly a mile, spill from the lake.
the currents diverge here—a role reversal
from downward floating to upstream struggle—
upstream where the birds are, resting in the lake
So I step out of my boat to the river bed,

leading the boat like a leashed dog
to trudge onward, knowing churning feet
serve me better than cycling arms for awhile,
my foot  sometimes swallowed by clay- sludge

And amid this pleasant scene a stench rises
from a rotting salmon carcass, sleeping in the mud,
finished  with her migration to waste in May’s warm weather.

Now  sun rays beat my back and the salmon seeps
into my eyes while swans fly overhead, their calls
penetrating the once silent sky. Mesmerized by the fish’s
grotesqueness against graceful swans, I take one
picture of the fish sinking into muck
thinking each spring I witness these cycles

Those birds just upon the horizon,
calling with clarion cries, flocked
 and pleased with the weather make me look
one last time at the fish before  my boat

drifts beneath the bird stoked sky.

You laugh and say, “This is where things go to die.”

Clearwater Lake, reached after paddling the Clearwater River
*Thank you to Jonnell Liebl for helping me with the structure of this poem. My first attempt was quite disorganized!

2 comments:

  1. Wonderful! I loved this poem. (:

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks Maggie! I hope you've been well lately and enjoying your summer :)

    ReplyDelete