April in the High Desert

“The end cracks open with the beginning.” 

-  D.H. Lawrence

and the silver limbs of the Chinese elms

welcome me to the abundance 

of mountains, slate-colored chamiso 

and the unexpected universe of the sky. 

For weeks, I have tried to answer the call

of the magpie, its blue wing feathers 

mocking me with the black & white of things.

I have come to the desert with its dust, thorns 

and tumbleweeds to learn how to be soft.

Today I picked up a pebble in my sock 

and it punctured the sole of my foot. 

On my writing desk, a vase filled

with red roses and parched sage. 

What is the magpie telling me,

perched on the rim of its nest?

Buds burgeon with the heat of afternoon. 

Once folded in, impudent thistle burrs 

tangle my gossamer scarf. 

Cottonwood buds clench 

their green fists until

the moment of softening.

MARGARET CHULA is the author of fourteen books of poetry, most recently Firefly Lanterns: Twelve Years in Kyoto. Read more.


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