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Poetry

Nature Poems by Jared Carter

Morels. Courtesy: Creative Commons
              MORELS

(In temperate regions of the northern hemisphere,
over seventy species of the highly prized
mushroom, Morchella, may be found)


This is the way, through apple trees
          gone wild – on past
The ruined church, where branches seize
          and catch – at last

An opening in the fence. We
          come every spring
Along a path that gradually
          bends ’round, to bring

Us back to what, still hidden here,
          not far below,       
Occasionally will reappear
          in the patched snow.

             SHORELINE

Then in late winter, after rain
          has swept the sea,
And neither presence can explain
          the mystery

Of sand unblemished, or of waves
          that wander there,
Though nothing follows, nothing saves
          those margins where

Half circles fade. As from a dream,
          a ragged frond
Of seaweed surfaces, and gleams,
          and then is gone.
Courtesy: Creative Commons

Jared Carter’s most recent collection, The Land Itself, is from Monongahela Books in West Virginia. His Darkened Rooms of Summer: New and Selected Poems, with an introduction by Ted Kooser, was published by the University of Nebraska Press in 2014. A recipient of several literary awards and fellowships, Carter is from the state of Indiana in the U.S.

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