4/14, Mollie’s Ridge Shelter, GSMNP
Fire burns
So do you, so do I
And truly, even with
the wind
Ripping itself apart
outside
In the unpaved world
beyond,
It is this fire that
has kept me in love
For all these years.
The gold and sweet orange
of our star
leaning behind the
mountains.
Though only barely painting
the tips of my tent,
as if with pine paper
bristles,
it still warms my
solitary hive,
even as the cool of
night takes hold.
4/20, Hot Springs, NC
As those two eyes
falter
Only saying it’s too
late for poetry
The white beam from the
center
Indolently shines on--
And rest, despite the
rhythmic backdrop,
Definitely wants to win
this one.
4/21, Hot Springs, NC
Sitting here, warm and
toasty
Thought of you
Whom I love
Mostly
Not that there’s part
that I don’t love
Just you’re the best,
And 1 more contrived
line
Will make this shit
come out just fine
The orgasm is complete
and unrelenting
The release changes the
man, whereas before,
He would remain stoic
and unmoved
4/22, Rich Mtn. Fire
Tower, NC
Rumors of meteors
convinced me to sleep on top of a mountain tonight.
But the moon was too
full—
Like when cake is too
sweet,
Or pocket watch chains
are exchanged for seashell combs.
And so now, it’s only
the wind that pierces the night sky.
4/23, Firescald Knob,
TN
Have you ever coughed
so hard
You felt like you’re
tearing pieces of your throat
Out your mouth?
If you spat those
coughs into a can
While trees threatened
to fall on you
While relishing in the
simple beauty of this life,
you’d know where I am.
4/24, Hogback Ridge
Shelter, NC/TN
O Fun Patrol, where art
thou?
Where dost thou lay thy
soggy heads this evening?
My muse has fluttered
on, or so it seems.
For the words before
you come apart,
at the seams.
4/28 Cherry Gap Shelter, TN
O, Cinco de Mayo,
Come twice a year
Once in a day, and once
in a week—
In East Tennessee, rain
water is beer—
Come Virginia &
Spring,
[that prospect looks
bleak]
But who wouldn’t mind
If the next town is
dry?
Only lap-dancing Lila
Won’t you give her a
try
And spades will draw
crumpets
From out of this space
Smashing their pumpkins
Right into your face
Hallowed thy name?
Thy king will soon come
But where is the queen?
In bed with his son.
5/1, just north of Rt.
19E, TN
The grass grows deep
And even though cars
whisper,
Unseen, on the ridge
overhead,
The groundhogs bustle,
Shielded from teasing
drizzlings,
And I, safe at last,
Cleanse my open pores
of the dirt the day has brought,
Simply, by closing my
eyes.
5/2, Moreland Gap
Shelter, TN
Lake of Watauga
burning bright under
fire—
Our laughter the fuel,
The sun the match,
And yet, why this
dream?
For verily, we won’t
even be there
Until tomorrow.
Is it a creek or a
river?
Crashing through rocks
with purpose
Providing a place to
wash these tired hands
And listen to its
trickling (gushing?)
Until all the world
turns blue
5/16, Lazy Fox Inn,
Damascus, VA
Creek beckons
Rain’s clouds threaten
But who on this godly
Earth
Could taint these
sunshine-laden valleys?
5/17, Lazy Fox Inn,
Damascus, Va
River whispers softly
sweetly
Then roars with the
pride
of rolling grasslands
and dark hollers
Singing my lonesome
feet to rest,
Wrapped in
goosefeathers and silt,
To tide off the end of
night
Into the breaking of
day
5/19, Davis Path
Campsite, VA
When you’re lost in the
rain
In a valley far from home
And thunder shakes the
trees
To remind you you’re
alone
Just catch an angel in
the water
Before she goes to her
throne
And throw back your
head and be
Free.
Free: of worry,
Of money.
Be free:
Be something not
costing anything
Be a GIFT
Expecting nothing in
return—
no strings attached, and
also,
Floating, liberated,
With no strings,
attached—
5/21, Little Laurel
Creek, VA
The thunder of the
night
plays fetch with the
thunder indoors
“Go get it?” she asks
And answering:
thump thump thump
5/30, Rice Field
Shelter, VA
What is Warmth?
Warmth is not simply
derived from the sun.
Nor the fire that burns
within,
as they say.
But warmth, my friends
and loves,
Comes from the peace
That all within and
without
Sing as Robins in
harmony @ twilight
6/4, Charlottesville,
VA
Bootsy
Tuning in
Dropping out
Not flopping in
Never stopping (in)
Pausing
The continuation
Of the journey
Liberal—to be free
Gratuitous?
Aloofedness
Dissolution—
The solution.
Non-minutian
Beautiful mutant.
Shackleton is in the
box
Shackleton is not in
the box
Eating smoked salmon
cut from soccer-playing
companions
Can he reach the
Elephants?
Secluded far away?
A life raft for the
ages,
Sitting cross the bay.
6/8, Pinefield Shelter,
SNP
He who plucked
His last note
Ringing wildly in the
wilderness
Made space for a
symphony
Uptempo & Vigorous—
The river rolled,
Cicadas on sax
And God bright and in
tails
Raising his hands
To conduct the
multitudes.
6/11, Grandma’s House,
Luray, VA
King of the Road
King of the Highway
Prince of the
Nether-Land
Colossus of Clout
Because my friends—
Life is not about fame,
Money or power
Yet instead
The way in which you
might take some time
Out of your day
To smell a rose
6/12, Tom and Judy
Shelter, VA
Making movements North
And do the bears and
bats
Even notice me pass?
The Buck—he does:
Feathers of fur, he
bows as I make my entrance,
And then runs to mate
In the sassafras and
nettles.
For us, the woods spell
H O M E
6/14, Blackburn AT
Center, VA
Love, it does
come for free
And this I know,
without a thought.
For if you had to take
a loan
For a piece of love,
What on Earth could you
do to repay it
But love back?
And that, to love, is
effortless
6/21, Rocky Mtn.
Shelters, PA
Family, like the way of
the trees
Harmony—a sappy
half-rhyme
But oh, when executed
precisely,
What a sensation to
behold!
So let the bees sing it
Just like that.
6/23, Jerry’s Fry
Shelter, PA
Gotta get some of that
stinky hiker trash on my stoop
In my poop
To be there in my life
Ooo yeah child
Gotta get some of that
stinky hiker trash
Just to be there for
me.
6/25, The Doyle,
Duncannon, PA
Train whistle, it blows
And the cogs screech
and tumble by my hotel window.
Will this antique wood
crumble onto the street
The next time that iron
mountain rolls on by?
Or will the lightning and
rain topple it from its feet.
I like to think that
The Doyle,
With its pinballs and
poolhalls,
will breathe yet
another day,
reverberating in its
kindness,
Through East Market
Street and on.
6/28, 501 Shelter, PA
All empty and awake
Sez Ray under the cold Carolina
Stars
In a world like this,
Only the 1st
person plural exists—
And that, too, is not.
6/29, Eagle’s Nest
Shelter, PA
Tho music rings &
fire sings
Hikers scatter
With rain’s
pitter-patter
6/30, Port Clinton, PA
A Mandolin plucks on
the night air
Or is it a ukulele?
And cicadas—or are they
nighthawks?—listen,
verbally, or are they
chiming in?
Does this wandering
mind sleep or dream?
7/1, Eckville Shelter,
PA
My mind is too full
To write a decent poem
This is what happens
When you leave a mouse
alone
7/2, Bake Oven Knob
Shelter, PA
Bastard Bugs
Cannot keep
All their kin
Supplied with sheep
So strap yourself
To a tree with boots
If you ain’t goin’
nowhere
7/8, Brink Shelter, NJ
Happiness,
Amongst the rocks and
hills
Late night quiet
distilled
A solitary buzz on the
soundscape
The wave of this
silence
peacefully crashes over
me,
Cradling me in its
waters,
I, safe in its power
7/16, West Mountain, NY
Mountaintop arias
whistled by the crickets,
And me, alone,
asleep in the grass,
Watching the sun bleed
into the blue
through closed eyelids
7/17, Deniro’s House,
Poughkeepsie, NY
The Band rings out
From the Church
Downstairs
Strings bursting out
dissonance
Intertwined with
melancholy yodels…
If I could feel the air
from their strokes
Rather than feel to
endure their theoretical racket
Perhaps I could sleep.
Whipped by the train
Rocked to the core
And back & forth
If only poison ivy had
flowers
Or bugs had names
Empathy: a theoretical
state of being, in modern times—
Still, a nice word,
A façade for Narcissus
to slink under
But ah! Let the flowers
speak
And the crickets
shriek,
Bowing and stringing on
those fibrous stems,
Through the whoosh and
wail
Of cars passing into
the night
7/22, a shelter 12
miles out of Great Barrington, MA
Pat drip pat
Rain on a tent
With the rest of the
woods,
Trees sighing and
crickets,
Rain makes the duck
down inside
Even warmer
7/23, Upper Goose Pond,
MA
Trading money
Trading spaces
Trading spaces
So quick, so quick
And whoosh—
The tables are turned
Are global economies
just a game?
7/29, Congdon Shelter,
VT
The creek sings
Cradling this travl’r
in its bends and curves
Smoothing the rocks
So as not to poke or
jab
The current urges
Under bridges and
through the pines
Flowing, glistening yet
satin,
Into the belly of the
wild.
7/30, Kid Gore Shelter,
VT
The Moth
When the moth is this
close
It sounds like a drum
thumping
Thwacking it does
nothing,
It’s stuck struggling
in the grass
Its wings could mend my
tattered shirt
Dead or Alive
I want it gone, but
death is no option—
Not because I’m
brimming with love, no
But because killing
something so violently alive
Would make me
uncomfortable
8/5, The Lookout Cabin,
VT
Dust and dirt have
settled
On the brand new oak
floor beneath me
Just in the manner that
I’d like to lay my thoughts,
My whole body—to settle
onto this floor and wait for the wind,
A wind, to move
8/6, Thistle Hill
Shelter, VT
If the dirt under my
overgrown fingernails
Were to represent my
happiness,
In quantity of course
rather than disposition,
Composition, really,
I’d give it a 10
Or at least a 3 out of
3.
8/8, Velvet Rocks
Shelter, NH
Frogs dance and rabbits
sound like bears
outside my tent
Here in Outside of New
Hampshire,
New Hampshire—and the
leaves shudder with rain’s pretenses
And even if I’m wet
I’ll still be twirling at dawn
8/14, Beaver Brook
Shelter, NH
Clouds won’t lift
Rain won’t shift
Hate won’t mold
If it’s cold
Get your kind
Off wintertime
‘Cause you ain’t goin’
nowhere
8/16, Chet’s Place,
Lincoln, NH
This plywood mattress
Is not speckled and
freckled with dirt
It’s down—from the
ducks
Found on the side of
the road.
They have the softest
down…
8/19, Lakes of the
Clouds Hut, NH
When the water feels
luke-warm
A simple dripp-ed foe
Can ripple the sheen
across a threshold
Into new color,
New light,
A new scene—
A giggle turns to a
laugh,
Surely permitted—
Snores to dreamy
sleepland,
And sighs & smiles
Into quiet nothingness.
Like this, a new idea
is born.
8/20, behind a bank,
Gorham, NH
On sidewalks
In brainlocks
The body does writhe
Sucking up pavements
Squirming with lies
When the pebbles rain
deeper
And the scurvy does
flow
Don’t ask for a blanket
Or help from below
8/21, Imp Shelter, NH
Ah, when the wave
descends
Breaking, sand and
shells
Fill my ears
Salt my nose &
mouth, hair
Or is it just the wind?
The nectarine sun bakes
and tans all
8/24, near the Maine
border, NH
When the light
turns golden and green
& the coyotes howl
over a kill,
Rabbit or marmot,
We in our duck fur
Pick a guitar
Around the fire
Singing out in
mismatched harmonies
The life of the simple
man
At home
On the trail in the
woods
8/25, Full Goose
Shelter, ME
Hands
The first time I ever
liked my hands
I was lying in a tent
in Maine
That night, they
weren’t fat
Weren’t small
But chiseled, strong,
knuckly
And I thought to
myself,
“What an above average
pair of hands.”
I could hear lovers
whisper
And chipmunks rustle
Next door in the trees
And if the moon hadn’t
been so bright that night
The stars’ glow may
have reached me as well,
And distracted me from
this newly perceived beauty…
but no.
That night, it was my
hands,
Just those beautiful
hands,
Writing these words,
For that night is this
and the trees & stars & lovers are here, so,
Will I still think
they’re pretty in the morning?
8/27, East B Hill Rd,
ME
Ride high on the king’s
highway
Take the A-train north
Move through fields and
deserts
And when your friends
are nothing more than
grains of sand
On a prairie dog’s lip,
Time to bite the cactus
and piss into the wind,
Find new
friends—icicles—dripping and fleeting,
Fragile, but hardy at
the base—
Frigid and refreshing,
signaling not the beginning nor the end of winter
But the dead of it—
Or just sit alone
In a field of grass
& bugs three inches deep
And let her blades
crush you
Envelop you
Caress you
Itch you
Switch you on
Shut you down
And then, maybe then,
Your mind can rest
8/28, South Arm Rd, ME
Though the light
flickers and dims
The pencil still
surreptitiously slithers thorugh the lines
Camping stealthily, but
only briefly,
Leaving a wispy shadow
Before moving onto the
next word,
Grasping at some sort
of meaning…
9/1, Cirque Campsite,
ME
On the days when you’re
too tired for poetry
Heat up some milk
But don’t let it
thicken (or burst)
And pour that fiery sustenance
into your crevasses & chasms
And maybe then a poem
Will find its way from
the ether to the mind
(soul?)
to page—a dream, too,
will suffice.
9/3, Little Bigelow
Shelter, ME
When the sun goes down
Earlier than you think
And it’s still bright
just miles West,
How can that frigid
rushing water nearby not beckon?
For, on that night, it
was limbs numb as ice
And exploding hearts
That we hunkered down
into our musty homes
And slept restlessly
‘til prickly daybreak
9/4, Pierce Pond
Shelter, ME
I saw a dead toad today
Squatting, toadlike,
squashed
But intact,
I thought to move it…
--lazy
--justified laziness:
it’s nature.
--other people must see
this
--did not want to get
dirty. could have used a stick.
I don’t know why I
recall this toad
Hours later in the
safety of my tent
Maybe because I’m loath
to write more
About the eternal
nearby water
Night after night
Well, now, the toad
lives on
9/5, Pleasant Pond
Shelter, ME
Incorporate compassion
Walk those woods
Through worlds, night
& dark,
Sun & blue, a
cloud,
Like Jack Wilinger’s
Sunday morning pancake—
Syrup not only sweetens
the day,
It fills it right up
9/6, Moxie Bald Mtn.
Lean-to, ME
Loons crying in the foreground!
The Hunger: for food or
sex,
Those 2 carnages,
Proliferating these
spotted night-birds
Through one more
Autumn…
And in a night as clear
& cold as this,
You can see them dive
down,
Into the shimmering
depths,
Making love and
feasting on fish,
The endless stars above
admiring themselves
In her lake’s dark
mirror
9/7, Monson, ME
Belly noises join
forces with droplets of rain in the quivering leaves above—
The bass and violas,
humming and strumming away together,
Eloping, a previous
engagement,
To the muddy
foot-passes of Maine’s cold interior.
9/8, Gentle Adventures,
Willimantic, ME
My wavering eyelids
Cannot block out the
flicker
of late night football
from inside
But my skin keeps the
sharp chill out,
Tho it feels the air’s
freshness all around!
The clouds have
surrendered to the stars,
So I say, “let the cold
in,”
And it sinks, hardening
the grass,
Revealing our breath,
And making us feel
particularly warm
Once we get there
9/9, Cloud Pond
Lean-to, ME
Wind is whipping!
Cold moves in next door.
The ripples on Cloud
Pond wave welcomingly,
Right back.
And me, the grumpy bear
holed up in my den—
Please don’t invite me
to the block party,
I’ll come out next
Spring.
9/11, Brook Falls
Shelter, ME
Oh, the stream!
Powerful since the
storm!
Enough to turn
turbines—
But ah—
But ah, but ah—
No turbines out here
but the trail
That keeps our feet
moving about it,
The sun energizing
And simultaneously
draining us
The pines silently
looking onto, into, this madness…
All to wind up back in
the river.
Heads submerged,
refreshed, cold,
We make our offering:
Ready to be thrashed
& twirled,
An aquatic circus,
circle, all starting again,
On itself.
9/13, Hurd Brook
Lean-to, ME
Bones bruised
But still can walk
Mind tired
Still can write
Heart torn
Still loving
Even against my will
Because my soul
Has gone through the
ceiling
And touched that
(eternal) light
9/17, Lexington, MA
Sitting quietly in a
jungle
Ferns and jaguars
Flies, heat, water
All of it.
And I’m just sitting
there
Nothing near or far
And I’m doing nothing
9/23, Lexington, MA
Nimbly, the poet waits
Listening with eager
awareness
The din of harsh
voices, resounding in the hallway
The wind off the
flicker of candlelight
Is not enough to fully
expose the conversations of his forefathers
And so, silently, the
poet tip-toes closer—
And yet, to hear,
truly, would surely taint the romance
The romance of such a
mysterious evening
And ah, without
romance, what is a poet?
9/24, Lexington, MA
Even the recently
brightened-by-batteries beam of flashlight
Shining up the
otherwise dun but everlastingly soft flannel sheets
Due to multitudes of
launderings,
Cannot stimulate this
mind enough
To make its hand do
what it wants it to.
10/1, Niday Shelter, VA
Crickets converse—
wah wah wah—wah wah wah
The dark leaves,
foreboding above
Although the sky looks
gray
It’s just simply
darkening
Enough to let that
first star shine through.
10/4, Wilson’s Creek
Shelter, VA
Is there always room
for poetry?
But ah, isn’t life but
a poem?
(is there room in life
for life?)
Stanzas and phrases
Slipping into the
cracks within emotions,
beauty, time itself?
But ah, only a poet
would say that.
So does that qualify
yours truly?
Or is it simply that I
write the poem
That’s already there.
10/7, John’s Hollow
Shelter, VA
Does solitude apply
when surrounded by
crickets?
Or even trees—wind?
The mind itself?
In the Cage, silence
ceases to exist—
In fact, it never did—
The mere idea of
silence disintegrates
Under the shrill
buzzing of neurological impulses
And the ritualistic
thumping of blood & heart.
And no, solitude never
applies,
For the presence of
those Other
Can never cease to
exist.
10/8, Brown Creek
Shelter, VA
How many poems can a
man write about crickets and creeks?
10/11, Charlottesville,
VA
Off of hardwood
flooring
The red light has that
sheen
Non-existent in the
woods
Tho the beds here are
more comfortable,
I’d rather see that
green-black silhouette
Of leaves