A Boat in the Forest, by Thomas Lux
Sixty miles from a lake,
no river or pond within forty-eight,
no ocean near,
and this rowboat, crisply painted, oarlocks
oiled, oars set and cocked,
in a small--mossy, pine needles--clearing
of sparse gray and yellow forest grass.
The light here: like joy, pain, like glass.
On its bow, in red paint, beside the anchor rope,
its name: A Joy To Be Hidden
But a Disaster Not To Be Found.
An odd place, a long name, for a boat.
From “New and Selected Poems” by Thomas Lux. (Houghton Mifflin: 177 pp., $23) Copyright 1997 Reprinted by permission.
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