Paul Willis
After the rain
When sourgrass bends sweet and heavy
over the path and even the sumac fawns at my feet,
when little streams run large and muddy
under the light of poison oak,...
All those miracles
Rain at dawn on the tent fly,
the hum of an idle mosquito.
Then another.
I pull on a headnet, turn over in my bag.
Idling for one minute only
Here is a sign that surely reflects
the Puritan heritage of our college.
For though it is meant for the coaches
...Bleeding heart
(Dicentra formosa)
Finally, a flower after my own.
You there, hanging
in unashamed bivalve clusters...
Starry Solomon’s plume
Starry, starry Solomon’s plume,
your constellations float
in clusters lowly wise,
zig-zagging asterisks of light,
reminding thick and shaggy cedars,...
We're back
After the fire, houses in the chaparral
start up again like new shoots of poison oak.
The resilience of nature? The power
of habit? The shallows of the human mind?
Pearly everlasting
Are you really? Underneath the snows
of winter, do you blossom on and on?
Do the pocket gophers crave you,
tunneling beneath that blanket,
pray to enter your secret chambers,...
Oregon grape
Oregon grape, what makes you so sour today—
or every day, for that matter? Your blue berries,
ripe to bursting, look delicious but they’re not.
...
Haircuts & tacos
That’s what the sign says
on the storefront in Bullhead City
along the steaming Colorado.
Intercession
When I wake in the night and think
of what I might have said in class that day,
I wonder why my life consists
To pull the plug
As if you were an odd species
of television, a fleshed machine
with un-rechargeable batteries.
Or a greasy remnant
of bathwater,
ready to rattle down the drain.
Skunk cabbage
I’ve seen it in the hollows of the Cascades in Oregon,
and head-high on the trail from Juneau up to the Icefield,
there to perplex...
What if the mightiest word is love?
After the President's address, it was still cold,
and I left with the others ten lines into the poem.
Still, I thought of the woman up there, ...
Green studies
I like the way that shrubs and flowers
lean against my classroom windows
as if wanting to enroll. What would the azalea
say when asked about the Forest of Arden?...
Necessities
My house burned down a month ago, so today
I walked to the bookstore and bought myself
a dictionary, a Bible, and a calendar.
What else does one need, really? For Malvolio,...
Visiting hours
A friend of theirs had been festering
like an old sandwich, rotting
a little before disposal. They had to come,
but it got to where they held their breath...