This Poem is a River

Margo Solod

This poem is not the river I left behind,

its stanzas contained within a single county.

 

This poem is 187 miles long, carves its way

through an entire state. This is not the poem I waded across 

 

in summer;  this poem holds parts deeper than I am tall,

runs too swift for even my strong-swimming, giant dog

 

rushing madly after ducks. This poem does not embrace 

fat, lazy perch and bluegill easily-caught-and-fried-in-cornmeal 

 

dinners, hard-fighting red-eyed hybrid bass, 6-inch brown trout 

or one beautiful 15-inch rainbow I caught where it should not be.

 

This poem holds monsters that elude me, salmon and steelhead 

migrating downstream in the spring.  In fact, all the fish

 

in this poem elude me. But this poem does include cold, shady 

places I dunk in during the hottest days, swimming holes 

 

and boulder fields and gravel bars doubling as islands 

the dog and I can reach in low water. This poem is not right 

 

outside my door, but I can walk there. This poem is crowded 

in summer, yet secluded spaces still find and embrace me.

 

This poem has flipped me off my feet more than once, 

frightened me. It is not the poem I lived with,

 

not the poem I want when I am homesick.  This poem

flows  north downstream which feels somehow wrong, 

 

surges and eddies and splashes me when I linger

on its truncated winter banks.   

 

This poem is my poem now.  It will nourish me

 if I let it.