Circadian Rhythm
After I remembered how he held his tea, gazed out
the window and I said how the leaves fall
litter the forest and he said perhaps more
dead pines at water’s edge or
dark poplars at night opening to full moonlight
the nightjar bracing the wind on the branch, just the nightjar
and the dirt as it freezes, hardens, so the moles go
deeper and the whitetails hungrier. Say it again, when will that black
bear find this trail and still before the last hundred years we shot
almost every one in these woods.
So then, it is the water carving its history into the mountain
but what if I want the mountain. You cannot
have the mountain or the barreds in the valleys
below it, even when the moose come to drink that moment
is theirs just the same. What’s the name of the fireweed
in the moose’s mouth or the sound of late winter fog breaking
into flocks of honking geese and that’s when he said
what then about poetry.
This poem and painting were first exhibited together in April 2018 at NorthWind Fine Arts in Saranac Lake, NY for the gallery’s annual National Poetry Month Celebration. “Circadian Rhythm” was also published in a limited edition chapboook Circadian Rhythm (Paulinskill Poetry Project, 2014) as well as North Country Public Radio (2021)