Some
40 miles west of St. Louis is one of my favorite places – Shaw
Nature Reserve, which all of us residents call by the name it was
originally called – “The Arboretum.” It’s more than 2,400 acres of woods and
trails, with some managed gardens but mostly woods. A favorite
walk is the river trail, out and down to the Meramec River, one of the
reserve’s boundaries.
When
you’re mostly a dweller of city and suburb, woods become an escape and respite,
but also a point of reference. They are a place to go to clarify and consider, a
point of reference and a means of reflection. Thoreau did it at Walden,
and Wendell Berry has done it in Kentucky,
but you don’t have to be famous to seek out the calm and silence of nature.
Teacher,
songwriter and poet Chris Yokel has
done it, too, at a nature preserve in Rhode Island called Weetamoo Woods. From
the fall of 2011 through the summer of 2012, Yokel traveled from his home in
Massachusetts to find reflection, and he collected it as A
Year in Weetamoo Woods: Poems.
The
poems are divided by the four seasons. The woods change, of course, from the dying
of fall and white of winter to the spring (when “bursting buds / betray the
signs of / the gardener”) and on to the hot richness of summer. Here is “Fallen
Ones,” from the winter section but offering a glimpse of the spring, and life,
to come.
they
silhouette the hill—
broken
trees
like
shafts of shivered spears,
a
memorial to the
Battle
of the Four Winds
whose
rage twisted ancient ones
from
earth.
I
feel its gale-borne arrows
pierce
my heart with memory,
Yet
here amid the blasted trunks,
the
supple birch springs up
both
strong and straight.
The
poems from the Weetamoo Woods become poems about life, birth, regeneration,
beauty, art, imagination, and faith. They are about the woods, yes, and about
the life of the poet in the woods. But in a very quiet way, the poems become
our lives, too, our experiences, our reflections.
A Year in Weetamoo Woods does something
else, too. It serves as a reminder that we all need time for thoughtful
consideration of our lives, and there’s no better place to do that than the
woods.
It’s
time for me to make another visit to my own woods. And I’ll bring these poems
with me.
(By
the way, Chris is going to be leading
a workshop for students on J.R.R. Tolkien at Tweetspeak Poetry, covering
The Silmarillion, The Hobbit, and Tolkien Life. You can find the details at Tweetspeak.)
Photograph of Weetmoo Woods: Eventful
3 comments:
Thank you for the introduction to Chris's collection. It looks like a fine set of poems.
Thanks Glynn for this very kind review.
it looks like there are also
some interesting events
that go on at the a reserve
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