To Find Oneself, Get Lost

June 11, 2013

Voices, Art / Culture

What I would not give
to be lost again
in the gold, hot summer woods
of my eleventh year,
when my parents took me
to go out picking blueberries;
I walked too far
into the woods by Echo Lake,
away from the cool of their voices,
took a turn to my left and ahead
and then found a second path,
one mother and father did not tell of;
I walked for as long as a song
until I couldn’t hear anything
but whatever lights upon the leaves
in the lost and humming summer
of bees and snapping green;
I was wanting to find blueberries
and discovered my own disappearance:
few things in this life
have brought to my soul
such exhilarating terror.

Bliss, I mean.

I meant to say bliss.




This piece was written by:

Rich Boucher's photo

Rich Boucher

Rich Boucher has published four chapbooks of poetry and once hosted poetry slam in Newark, Delaware. Since moving to Albuquerque in 2008, Rich has performed all over Duke City. His poems have appeared in The Nervous Breakdown, The Mas Tequila Review and The Legendary. Hear some of his poems at richboucher.bandcamp.com

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