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I climb the limestone stairs through an arch in rock, into the earth’s womb, pass through to a surprise: George loves Lisa painted on a wall. I wonder, did he ever tell her? Did she ever know or think of him, raise a brood of screaming children? Did they kiss near wild ginger above the stony apse? Did lady’s slipper orchids adorn their meeting place where deer drink from rocky cisterns? Did their love wither like maidenhair fern, delicate as English Lace? The symbols have outlived the moment. There is only today, only the murmur of water underground, my finding one trickle into a pool. I never knew this George or Lisa. The rock bears their names in silence, names the stream forgot long ago.
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Jun 9, 2015
Jun 9, 2015 at 7:40 AM UTC
Glen Falls Trail
I climb the limestone stairs through an arch in rock, into the earth’s womb, pass through to a surprise: George loves Lisa painted on a wall. I wonder, did he ever tell her? Did she ever know or think of him, raise a brood of screaming children? Did they kiss near wild ginger above the stony apse? Did lady’s slipper orchids adorn their meeting place where deer drink from rocky cisterns? Did their love wither like maidenhair fern, delicate as English Lace? The symbols have outlived the moment. There is only today, only the murmur of water underground, my finding one trickle into a pool. I never knew this George or Lisa. The rock bears their names in silence, names the stream forgot long ago.
Included in The Southern Poetry Anthology: Volume VI, Tennessee, University of Texas Press.Thanks for the comments.
ray-zimmerman
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Jun 9, 2015
Jun 9, 2015 at 7:40 AM UTC
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