Avoiding the stockade
and bastioned gate
but inadvertently walking
over the site of the gallows,
estuary cattails pierce a lacy mimic
of the fort’s dark piked palisades.
Red winged blackbirds harry
a great blue heron who flies
with a shiver of cracked
eggshells slipping from its beak.
Some languages
reverse past and present,
with sun and moon,
black lined days on the calendar,
and the wristwatch’s ticking goad
all coiled at the root.
First church.
First sawmill.
First school and lending library.
First brace of public executions.
First house of brick.
Where do the great
orators keep themselves
at present? Where land
takes its name first from
its people then perhaps
from the delicate mauve blooms
of fringecup woodland stars.
Copyright © 2023 by Laura Da’. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on March 7, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.