
“Playing Cards in Fryeburg Maine” by Eastman Johnson
Sensing mild adventure
My spring forest beckons
Boughs like green-handed arms
Overhead sweep me in
Crackling twigs underfoot
Start critters to scurrying
Darting through shimmering
Figments of latticework
Sun-woven shadows
Cast down upon air fairly
Pungent with pine-scent
And redolent bark
All the while looking
For traces of passage
Among mossy trunks
Around angular boulders
Half or more never seen
Dry icebergs that jut up
From brown-needled beds
Sprouting tussocks of turf
Alert for the odd bit
With color or form
Suggestive of artifact
Waylaid by history
Bull moose and whitetail
Track snowmelt-charged streams
Coursing rocky treed foothills
Where smugglers annulled
Prohibition by hauling
With oxen-drawn sledge
Furtive freightloads of spirits
Canadian contraband
Routes marked by ruins
Crude stopover shacks
Rotten planks overgrown
With woodland encroachment
Local lore hints one such
Way-station stood up
Right here on my land
Though no one knows where
My crown-antler Bowie
Hacks passable trails
Through vines thick as thumbs
Sturdy saplings like pickets
Slow progress until one good
Yank frees a fanned clump of
Maidenhair ferns whose roots
Tangle with rust-crusted chain
My ironwood staff
Pokes and prods fertile earth
Tracing widening arcs
That stop at a massive
Rock shelf cantilevered
Across the slope face
Sharply steepened above
A good twenty feet long
The ledge caps a space
Dense with thickets of
Buckthorn and bittersweet
Grappling to fill every inch
I poke horizontally
Jabbing lush verdure
And jump from a thrill
When I hear report back
Telltale thumps of some
Hollow-backed wood
Well concealed from the eye
Tamping down my excitement
I vow to return armed with
Counterblade loppers and
One-eighty lanterns
Once autumn drops leaves
In hobbling back down
All my pain burns more viciously
Scorching what courage
I might draw from rousing
Inspiriting echoes
An eager mind sounds
But these thought-killing fires
Make me frequently lay-by
Without peace to wonder
How many more seasons
Will give me adventure
And finish my history
A fictional reverie from my books Range of Motion, Music of Scars and Legacies (vol. 1)
well done!
just finished the movie “Walking Out” and then read your piece. you’ve captured the wilderness there.
but watch out for moose and bear, or else!
cheers.
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much appreciated
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Appreciating nature has a down side for we who are long in the tooth and hobble, the death part of the cycle. I also wonder how many seasons now as you so skillfully stated.
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a wonder that takes up the forefront of one’s thoughts
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Who needs a history book when all that needs to be said is here, in this poem.
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that statement more appropriately applies to your extraordinary tales
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Oh I love reading this, how I can smell the damp pine litter mingling with rich, black earth and the heady exhalation of the trees…
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I thank you most sincerely
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The rhyming rushes me forward to find what is hidden in the forest. A wonderful mixing of nature and human.
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glad you enjoyed it
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Great description and writing!
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many thanks
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