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Above the rock slide near Thoreau spring
are stone offerings on a cairn. Clouds brawl
in filaments of mist billowing from
scrubbing boards and a mother
fiercely rubbing the long night’s stain.
From middle age I invoke damp winter
days hanging frozen in sheets and trousers
above a stove and a mother’s wrinkled sighs
patting migrant bruises, her long corridor
of convalescence compressing anxiety
to fingertips that trace ladders of
stitches from chin to throat to breast.
Speaking an antique language
that rose and fell in a reverie of sighs,
she brought forth from the stiff line
of northern sun curses for the ironing board,
her discontent falling onto my phantom lap.
In updrafts of memory I swallowed
her restlessness, watching evening steam
rise from threads of river to sift the pine
and fir on sweatered hillsides.
Behind the Knife Edge the sun began
its descent as I retraced my way
down the rock strewn path.
Hugh Curran was born in Donegal, Ireland, and is a lecturer in Peace Studies at the University of Maine. He was formerly the co-director of the Emmaus Homeless Shelter in Ellsworth.
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