Short Journey Upriver toward Oishida

Roo Borson

Image | BOOK COVER: Short Journey Upriver Toward Oishida by Roo Borson

Short Journey Upriver Toward Oishida is about concentration and reflection — on loss, on home, on poetry in our lives. A powerful and thoughtful collection.
Short Journey Upriver Toward Oishida won the Griffin Poetry Prize, the Pat Lowther Memorial Award and the Governor General's Literary Award.
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From the book

The willows are thinking again about thickness,
slowness, lizard skin on hot rock,
and day by day this imaging transforms them
into what we see: dragons in leaf, draped scales
alongside the river of harried, spring-stirred silt.
The magpie recites Scriabin in early morning as a mating song,
and home is just a place you started out,
the only place you still know how to think from,
so that that place is mated to this
by necessity as well as choice,
though now you have to start again from here,
and it isn't home. Venus rising in the early evening
beside the Travelodge, as wayward and causal as
will, or beauty, or as once we willed beauty to be —
though this was in retrospect, and only practice
for some other life. Do you still love poetry?

From "Summer Grass" by Roo Borson, Short Journey Upriver toward Oishida ©2004. Published by McClelland & Stewart.

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