Denise Low: California Poets Part 7, Two Poems
Denise Low
July 1st, 2024
California Poets: Part VII
Denise Low
Two Poems
FOX SPIRIT
Nose to ground like a dog but cat-like—
triangle ears pricked—
it glances at me the interruption
back to scent of a rat
rummaging noises in ivy leaves.
So quick it gambols
like the ghost I sighted once
brown blur of a man on the sidewalk.
You are that fox adept
on this almost-a-mountain a magician
of the heart. I know your spoor
dear one now partway vanished.
#
Sugar Maple
Her begging hands
collect alms
from the sky.
A fortuneteller reads
each vein
of her lined palms.
When she dies
tangerine birds
fly from her arms.
Where she once lived
an old brown woodshed
falters.
Someday dry boards
will remember how
to bleed sugar.
#
Ode to Deer
Hooves beat against the gate. Eyes open.
Our golden irises trap dawn’s bright.
How effortlessly you move in memory:
a riddle with no answer.
I once went deer hunting. The rifle smelled of oil.
Underfoot the woods crunched.
Springtime foods are red roses and jasmine.
In autumn, swaths of acorns disappear.
A sister cooks tender backstrap with hull corn.
Communion remains on my tongue.
Beneath juniper spikes once a fawn sleeps alone.
Neighborhood children hush quiet.
You step along the stream, shifting heft
of eight prongs. I recall this for years.
#
Psithurism
From “psithurisma,” Greek for “whispering,” like wind-
shivering trees, especially pines, as in Theocritis,
“How sweet is the pine’s whisper as she makes her music,”
the silent P in the word dropped so zither-sounds of strings
strum the air. A writer from the mountains once noticed
how friendly was the wind blowing trees in my yard—
slow fanning of a white pine, sway of a ponderosa,
its yellow cloud of spores tracing air’s currents.
No afternoon squalls of sleet peppered our faces.
Maybe that P letter does have a sound, a puff
rather than airy hisses like with sounds D and TH.
Listen now to breath—yours, mine—what
stirs the air along the river line updrafts
sending crows scattering into bluffs.
#
Author Bio:
Denise Low, a Kansas Poet Laureate, is winner of the Red Mountain Press Editor’s Choice Award for Shadow Light. Other recent books are Casino Bestiary (Spartan) and a memoir, The Turtle’s Beating Heart: One Family’s Story of Lenape Survival (University of Nebraska. A book of archival/verse experimentation is forthcoming from the University of Arizona Press in 2024. She founded the Creative Writing Program at Haskell Indian Nations University, where she taught and was an administrator. Low is past board president of the Association of Writers and Writing Programs and currently curates the Indigenous Voices series for The 222, an arts organization in Sonoma County, California. She teaches for Baker University’s School of Professional and Graduate Studies.
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