Photo by Rick Hafele
Spring Aires
A fen where the earth blooms red.
As mists part, I pause—awake now.
Two sandhills, three-toed strut strut,
slit of beaks tilted, point skyward—
to sing in a wet forgotten language
one made of spring and hollow and echo.
If I am mute. If I am dry with winter.
If I have neglected to bloom.
Here too let us aim our hunger
as if harbingers, as if winged.
A ritual bow—deep muddied
a lust that will lift stick, leaf—
will toss debris and rise, defy earth
in feathered dance—this holiness.
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Kimberly Blaeser, past Wisconsin Poet Laureate and founding director of Indigenous Nations Poets, is a citizen of White Earth Nation. Her sixth poetry collection, Ancient Light, is forthcoming in 2024. kblaeser.org
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