You’ll find your way,
as we did. One summer we stumbled
up a slow dirt road, praising
what we saw was brave to vanish.
We were new
to unrigged mornings; our love
tinseled. We had claimed a tabernacle
of owl feathers and rock strata
and a tiny house. It was August,
then winter and the world
moved with its divisions
and shame, but we brushed that off and blessed
what was left: our ability to reverse
each door in and out. Worshipping
palpable time in this round village
that showed us where light lusters
and rests—cows, corn, dust—
we had come for the sky, the maze
of continuous vision. And I saw it first.
And wanted it most.
All around, the sun places goblets
of heat on the ground, on the wilderness
of our bodies, which have done
so much seeking. I have never
known what to need. The lizards hold tight
our russet home. We are changed
and the same. The olive tree is blooming now.
–
Lauren Camp is the author of five books, most recently Took House (Tupelo Press). Honors include the Dorset Prize and finalist citations for the Arab American Book Award, the Housatonic Book Award, and the New Mexico-Arizona Book Award. Her work has been translated into Mandarin, Turkish, Spanish, and Arabic.