BY JORY MICKELSON
Even Walt Whitman wanted
to put me into a city
of his own devising: brotherly
love. But I refuse his landscape, no
ferryboat, no trolley car, no high-rise
by him yet unseen. Instead give me
a field, this field, dazzled by light,
a dayfield. The blessing of sun
and air revealing green
in deep, empty glister.
Here the lover comes, even
as the light fades, to watch
it go, to watch the goose,
the sparrow, the owl, the slipform
lake, its shore a string. Every
feathered thing, beaded
and bereaved into an endless
Whitmanian line. Patiently
allowing the night, the tender
growing night.
Let no lover be found, not in
the city, not two men
hidden in its dirty scrawl
of noise, in concrete’s unbearable
narrowing—but let us be
received into this field. Two men
grasping hands, hands pressed
in prayer to wind, to darkness.
Two men pressed against the grass,
given to giving ourselves to one another.
Jory Mickelson's first book, Wilderness//Kingdom, is the winner of the Evergreen Award Tour from Floating Bridge Press, and won the 2020 High Plains Book Award in Poetry. Their work has been published in the US, Canada, and the UK. They live in the Pacific Northwest. To learn more, visit www.jorymickelson.com