Woods That Cape Breton Doesn’t Know
(after Elizabeth Bishop)
Sunday morning.
Once the bus rolls past Guymon,
trailing a plume
of blue-gray exhaust that follows
along like a stray dog,
there’s nothing—you’re inside
the handle of the pan.
Not a single white-clad steeple
can be seen anywhere
across this landscape.
As you reach more nothing,
you enter a flat forest of scrub
the locals called blackjack oak
when there were locals here.
Locals now are comprised
of one lone hawk
circling a mouse, and a rattlesnake
waiting for the hawk to decide.
Mesquite trees fill the holes
between the oaks,
creating a maze of sage and
rough dark bark that’s impossible
to penetrate. An ugly view to those
who weren’t born with a little antelope bone
in their blood.
Three riders sit on the Greyhound
as it grinds the road into eventual powder
with its up and down swaying over
undulations and dips, each rider in his own
seat far apart from each other.
No one speaks.
Humanity shared is an intrusion into misery.
Two are asleep. One is snapping soon-to-be-deleted
pictures out the window Beyond the curve
of the horizon, a wisp of smoke—
An invisible house made from adobe
where a woman must be rendering fat.
Settlers once lived there.
The woman is thin but stout. her fierce brown hair
worn in a tight bun. The husband is making
a dust storm rise behind a mule. Two children
do laundry in a tub and splash each other.
The perfect picture of life on the prairie and just
out of reach of recreation.
It’s a lonesome business traveling into country
where no one wants to be. The sleepers try to dream
the days away.
The bus’s brakes sigh. Wakes them.
The entrance to New Mexico. One sleepy rider
stumbles down the steps. Digs in the underbelly
for his luggage. Finds it. Sits on it to wait
for his next ride. Two more hours
until the store. Then four more to Taos.
A place situated in the same place it’s been
for years.
The picture taker snaps another picture.








So well done. True poetic visions. This is a great example of why I visit poetry sites. For gems like this. You are a skilled seer of poetry.