I drive all the way to Poughkeepsie to take the train down into New York
Even through it’s a full hour faster to take the line that runs from white plains
Because the train from Poughkeepsie hugs the Hudson River
I get onto the train and I make sure to sit on the river side
And although I have hours of homework to do
I cannot bear to look away from the river
Shining in the first sunny day of springtime
Along the river I look for birds
I see migrating canada geese in synchronized Vs
Finally returning to this land as the sunlight soaks into the rocky earth
I see scraggly crows joking from the tree tops and power lines,
This train full of people is the finest joke they’ve seen in years and god knows, they needed a good laugh
There’s one hawk
Too proud for the bent crooked maple beneath it, I know she is looking for opportunity,
Her hard eyes and dirty feathers hint at a pain I know she’ll never tell me
But she is sure to tell me about the beauty and power of her wings and the way they move even the air to her will.
On the train I see the rolling hills of the hudson valley.
I know the giant who lived in peace with the Haudenosaunee people
Who tread lightly across her back
I see her strong shoulders and I sense the strength of her legs
I am awed by the curve of her belly into the soft green-ness of her shores
And I weep with her that we all forgot her tremendous beauty
And in this way I too am the Hudson River.
Along the river I count every single bud
On every single tip of every single branch of every single tree
Birch, maple, oak, pine, beech, aspen, and poplar
They all promise:
“Springtime”
Whisper:
“Rebirth, life”
Each bud is a friend and lover
I cannot wait to meet each individual leaf.
I’m particularly fond of the red maples in their
Pink bundles, turning the sky and hillsides a cheery red.
I sit and watch the river go by and I watch the springtime start
And I feel the tides pull at my chest.
I would drive countless hours for this.