Bootleg Mountain, Jocassee Gorges
by Keith Phelps
Old things
A crowded gallery of pitch pines
And huckleberry bushes spreading like a high tide
Straddle the bedrock ridge
Almost pushing the world off
This lichen gumline with its sparse granite teeth
A black bear
Gouged its claws on the bark of not one
But three trees here
And I swear I saw
Epicormic sprouts
Tending the grooves
Anise lingered on my fingers
From the goldenrod
And other observations
Pointed to disrupted cycles
Too much work from mountain laurel
Too little fire from human
We stood in that time
Feeling our lungs converse around us
While we measured
The land that was there
All there
Yawning to its task:
Hello to Cherokee and its painted bears!
Hello to Soapstone Church and its mothers!
Hello to kudzu pulling the weight of sky to us!
Hello to medicine in yucca and yellowroot!
Hello to transmission wire cutting the mountains!
The land does not forget
And it even made me remember you
And the time we watched
The bull moose
Travel from the water through the paper birch
Its beard dripping lake mud all the while
Here on the mountain head
We noted names growing in-situ
We remarked how changed this view was
The loss and the hope of it all
The way people and past linger
Like timber rattlesnakes on two tracks
We waded through the mountain laurel
Following needle and GPS
Down to the worn pickup
Hoping we were changed and hoping we wouldn’t forget