Coastal Plain
by Kathryn Stripling Byer The only clouds forming are crow clouds, the only shade, oaks bound together in a tangle of oak limbs that signal the wind coming, if there is any wind stroking the flat fields, the flat swatch of corn. Far as anyone's eye can see, corn's dying under the sky that repeats itself either as sky or as water that won't remain water for long on the highway: its shimmer is merely the shimmer of one more illusion that yields to our crossing as we ourselves yield to our lives, to the roots of our landscape. Pull up the roots and what do we see but the night soil of dream, the night soil of what we call home. Home that calls and calls and calls. |