Butterfly Summer
This monarch must be about the last one
to go this summer, the rest already
headed back south. It will take two
generations to make it back to Mexico
by winter, and this one will die
in a few weeks, the sturm and drang
of her life consisting of the journey
to the middle of the continent.
Mine is here, now, watching her prepare,
working her wings slowly.
She is preparing to climb ten thousand feet
into the sky to catch the jet stream
that will take her to a home she’s never seen.
I’m dreaming of that place too,
a field in perhaps Kansas or Colorado
where she will sleep but others will wake
with the urge to just keep moving.
Orange Summer Newt
This morning, I would crush
the newt on the trail
with my boot heel
except in August
the valley the Allegheny
runs through is a green world,
and everything before my eyes
has been green
and all my thoughts have been green too,
and this newt is orange
and nearly frozen
in the frost of the early day,
so I turn my boot and move on,
leaving him
but thinking new thoughts,
orange thoughts
all day and
into the cool evening.
Chicken of the Forest
The giant orange mushrooms growing
out of rotting logs are supposed to be
edible and even delicious,
but I’ve never wanted to cut one up
and fry it. I’d rather leave it
here for a bear.
Today, I have apples,
and they’re fine on a cold morning,
standing next
to this one fungal flame of orange
in a green world.
It’s enough to crunch
through one apple and then the next
and remember those days living
in the city
when I would dream of being able
to walk out into the woods by myself
and to have this kind of morning
one that exists without worry,
conversation, or doubt.
I am here now, alone
except for the mushrooms and the bear
I have not seen in a week,
and I watch
my thoughts beyond words
form like a fungus,
growing rich and alive.
Small Columns of Stone
The trail veers off to cross this place
where the stream winds
through the stone ruins of chimneys,
what’s left of the cabins
where people used to rest
on their weeks off in the summer.
Something happened, someone decided
to change the road,
and this place only has the memory of
families,
and I know that it is the memory of my people,
aunts and uncles who used to come up
with my grandparents.
All of those people are gone now,
and I did not know them
until they were old,
but I can hear their child voices
in this moment before autumn.
I can hear them call
to their parents.
I can hear their parents laughing
and calling back.
John Brantingham was Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks’ first poet laureate. His work has been featured in hundreds of magazines. He has twenty-one books of poetry, memoir, and fiction including his latest, Life: Orange to Pear (Bamboo Dart Press) and Kitkitdizzi (Bamboo Dart Press). He lives in Jamestown, New York.
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