Finding Woodrow in the Walker Museum Sculpture
Gardens, Minneapolis, Minnesota
In
the 1970s I made horses out of real mud and sticks. They were in part
meant
to reflect how much a horse is part of his environment. I combine
the
figure and the ground.
--Deborah Butterfield
Notes on her bronze sculpture entitled Woodrow, 1988
His dreams are always blue
a light powder blue
since bronzing
yet he longs for wood
and supple green bending of limbs
running through fields, forests, rivers
The distant drone of traffic
through his ribs
grows louder as his eyes reach across the bridge
to a small pond edged with grass
a duck sails downward
lands
slowly
ripples splashes
the house on the pond’s edge stands silent
brown roof dripping in the cold rain
Within the pond
a smaller island sits
brown and parched from winter
but on the opposite bank
grass is blowing green now
teasing his nostrils
in this April rain
His legs are planted firmly
he feels the soft mud
hooves reaching deeper every day
and he knows he will go no further
the dreams return now
a light powder blue mist
yet this time
tinged here and there
with memories of green
In the
Woods
for
Ryan
I.
Granite huddles in masses
trips over itself
gets away down embankments
to pile upward
in a height competition
gray dark stones numbered on
stone
the gods’ forgotten child’s play
left to punctuate
these New England woodlands
collect flecks of moss,
sparrows’ nests
and contemplative hikers
II.
Green in winter, they wave their
tops
to this January sun
smile
their glazed eyes rolling gently
dopey and defiant like this warm
brightness
against a creaking mid-winter
frost
inviting chickadees who answer
in staccato riddles
III.
An uncontrollable smile runs
bouncing pine-needled path
brushing green hair softly
beneath breezy fingers
sap-oozing knot holes
sunlight slanting through
to chasing squirrels flitting
birds
above and between
camouflaged branches
mossy stones to the left
and more of this path
yes more
IV.
Walking tree-filled hills
the oak, pine and birch step
aside
leading you forward along
winding trails
rhythmed feet feel stones, feel
earth
steady and flat for a half mile
then slow with steep
here thick with shady hemlock
here oak-flecked sun on boulders
calling for a climb
red checkerberries
small blue flowers hugging
wrinkled roots
puffed white stalks and seeds
blown thick like snow
and the trail reaching upward
again toward short scrub and granite tops
which offer a wide-open sky
green hills speckled with ponds
and hawks circling, floating on
warming currents
I am a long way
away
after a photo by Albert Desrochers
yet I feel the
brush-cut field
of my youth, the
stretch
of open space
reaching far ahead
beyond the big
rock – Plymouth Rock
we called it, and
it might have been
in those hazy
marshlands of our
third grade social
studies reader
(perhaps the ocean
had spread here
before inland
birches, maple, and spruce
narrowed the view
of our sky).
Stepping past this
boulder, midfield
with swishing high
grass whispering
at pantlegs, was
beyond
ourselves, beyond
backyards
beyond dinner bells
and cut-through paths.
This
warm-shouldered day I feel the rock
with memoried
eyes, anxious still
at this child-cast
line in the grass
wavering with a
wind's gentle urging
toward
fall-colored, pathless woods.
An oak has drifted
across my nostrils
and I almost touch
feathered clouds.
I move forward now
with this rock.
You, Ocean,
you fat child on a swing set,
watch thickened rivers empty into you,
iron legs stretch into your bulk,
tankers spit at your froth.
You splash at granite,
sweep pebbled beaches
while rusted barrels tear at your belly.
So you tip the occasional summer home
in Key West or Malibu—
you, ocean,
where are your narwhal?
where the sucking whirlpools of your wrath?
Wood Originally
All xylophones were wood,
And Egyptian pillows.
Originally everything was made of wood.
Stoves were maple wood,
Blankets were sandalwood,
Cows were made of oak,
Roads were paved with solid pine,
Vegetables were wooden, water
Was mostly beech wood,
People were made of wood—
Small children were particularly brittle,
Horses, and dogs and cats,
Poems— all wood.
No, things aren't like
what they used to be, originally.
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