Forrest Pritchard's Blog
April 27, 2025
Maryland Mountains
Maryland’s not known for its
Mountains, but today will do⎯
Spring’s first dogwood snow.
Lovers kiss near the precipice.
A 9,700 pound canon had a radius
Of 360°. The Union could break
A lot of hearts with that fire
Power. Imagine, looking up
Into the veil of redbuds, purple
Spider wort, the last of Virginia
Bluebells, to witness iron death
Inescapable. That feels familiar,
Doesn’t it? Destruction on a
Clear spring day. Here on the
Heights, it seems safe for now.
But there’s always the sky.
February 11, 2025
Farewell to a Marvelous Cat
There is no death for the flying leaper,
Butterfly chaser, rainbowed, reaching,
The spotted twist, bone-white whiskers–
Late night flopper, flouncing close.
Green eyes golden in a cold kitchen.
Your purring pulse, brushing warmly past,
Chattering hellos. Tail like a marching baton–
So much joy! Forever curled in sunlight.
Chin up! I hear you now, padding down
The steps to the front door and out–out,
Where we all go to play, soft-eyed, so happy
To say, once again, “Oh! There you are!”
April 18, 2024
What I Don’t Know
I heard it first from Socrates—
Wind through the mind,
Rosemary blossoms and bumblebees.
What I don’t know could fill a universe.
An atheist in high school, dismissing
Warring clans. Trademarking truth!
Pragmatically insisting that
What I don’t know could fill a universe.
I was married, divorced. With all
The best intentions of course.
So many opportunities. Am I cursed?
What I don’t know could fill a universe.
Soften your gaze and it becomes clear—
Gently crosseyed, leaping dolphins appear.
Learning in reverse that
What I don’t know could fill a universe.
Gurus at the pizza place—
Bringers of light! Yoga teaches
We can stand on our face.
What I don’t know could fill a universe.
At last, the sun in April. Glowing trees!
Illuminated day, breathing lilac!
Clouds too bright to see!
What I don’t know could fill a universe.
April 3, 2024
We Do Well To Let Go
Abrupt distractions—
Cherry petals affixed
To my boot soles, now
Peppering the pavement.
No, not pepper—
Pastel. Softness,
The sopping skies
Salted with sighs,
Cars cresting the round
Mountain, moving
Clouds in all directions.
Neon vaporous April.
We forget! How abruptly
We are reminded—
Trails of cherry
Blossoms beneath our feet,
We do well to let go.
February 13, 2024
Two Sycamores Along Rt. 7, Near Berryville, Virginia
Not far from the highway
Two sycamores rise from
The same stump, so alike
In every way they appear
To be twins. But nothing is
Completely identical; lives
Are composed of contrast.
And although from the road
They seem to be greeting
Passersby synchronistically,
It’s just as easy to interpret
One is waving goodbye to
The other: “I’m aware you
Believed we were united,”
One tree says to the other,
Its back turned for a century,
“But farewell. We’re certain
To meet once more—after
All, we have sprung from
The same root for eternity.”
Oh, mirror! We never see
Our eyes—only reflections
In the gaze of new lovers,
The glass of passing cars,
Until, leaving the body we turn,
At last recognizing ourselves.
November 9, 2023
Play
When you were a child,
How did you play?
Before reading any further,
Pause. Recall.
Remember the smell of play.
Its delicious tastes.
Remember your heart
In your ears, the steady
Pulse of white noise.
How exciting! The feeling
Of surrendering all senses—
Two disembodied eyes.
For that is what you were,
Floating, timeless,
Now. Observing who
You were. You were lost
At play. You weren’t in your
Body! At play, you
Projected dream.
I saw you. I was there
Too. Three, four, five
I dug in the cool West
Virginia soil, finding myself
On the other side
Of walnut roots and
Mouse nests. I didn’t claim
This made any sense!
Medicinal, becoming lost.
They say the soul sits
Just below the belly button,
In front of the spine. This
Core compelled me into the
Warping woods, summer salted
Skies, fluffed rabbits flouncing
Through the clouds, the living
Fingers of trolls excavated
Beneath tree stumps.
Liberated, lost, throwing off
Clothes, stomping naked up
The emerald-cress creek,
Rainbow dace flashing,
Worm toes in the chocolate
Pudding mud, wading
Upstream as the current
Dissolved my footprints,
My penis a witching wand
Dowsing me towards
Source, towards the silver
Spring, towards the gray
Broken limestone trickling
Cold water, dark water
From hundreds of miles
Distant, drank drunk in
Pennsylvania to flow into
The light across my pink
Feet. Oh, water! What
Did you see in the darkness?
I flew there, the crystalled
Grottoes, the braille of
Sinkholes mapping the
Valley floor, and I visited
Every one unchaperoned,
Squeezed through the
Hairline cracks, witnessed
The blind newts, the blue,
Glowing mosses, the colorless
Water in the caverns’ darknesses,
Unseen for five hundred
Million years. Not bad for a
Kid! And do you want to
Know what happened
Next? When I returned—
To my body, I mean—sun-
Burned and smelling of
Catnip and lily pads,
I retraced to discover
That my clothes had been
Stolen! I’m being literal here,
This really happened, and I
Walked back barefoot across
The thistled pastures to
My grandparent’s farmhouse
No longer playful but
Naked as Eve, aware of
My shame, the soul of my
Belly spasmed with sobs.
Oh, little one! This world.
My clothes had been taken
By Jim, a farmhand with five
Young children. He didn’t know.
How could he? My clothes
Were returned. The cruel
Day dispelled, carried down-
Stream to the Shenandoah,
The olivine Potomac, the
Chesapeake Bay and the
Atlantic, until, rising, rising,
It fell once more against
Pennsylvania. It’s hard
Not to take this all
Seriously, isn’t it, to allow
Our clothes to be stolen—
Naked at play without shame.
I’ve never forgotten
How to play. I’ve only
Forgotten, sometimes,
For a little while, where
I go when I’m not here.
October 27, 2023
Eating Spicebush Berries
It’s strange to know the title
Before the title appears. Receiving—
Researchers at the University of
Virginia report that most reincarnations
Occur within five hundred kilometers
Of the avatar’s death. Prior memories
Typically dissolve by age six:
Cobwebs. Distractions. Sunlight.
Potomac, I have known your silty
Banks for how long? From before—
Gabardine green. I carried a girl frog-
Like on my back across the river, her
Garland arms choking me as I swam.
Cautious of unseen rocks, I felt the wet
Nylon of her swimsuit billowy against
My skin, warm as blood-rich placenta.
Crossing the bridge I think of Hart Crane,
Of droughted riverbeds stretching fishless—
Of the crayfish husks discarded by raccoons,
The glimmering kiss of skipping stones
And the odor left on the fingertips, widening
Ripples where an Appalachian sky washes
The gritty scent amongst the leaves, the love-
Soaked branches, the submerged roots of
Sighing grasses with names I have known
Yet forgotten again, and again once more—
Only to step onto the C&O canal trail
On an October morning into another
Silence, the sacred birth of experience.
This is not uncommon! Do you see me
In the cathedraled alley? We approach
Beneath the hickories, sumptuous with
Shadows. How strange, remaining strangers
All this while, recognizing this intention—
But no more. She says, “I was always
Told all red berries are poisonous.”
I was too, encircled by five fluttering
Grandmothers, insistent that children never
Die, that the blue hard candy in the white
China dish was for display purposes only, and
Once, slippery as a trout, a piece lodged in my
Throat. Screaming, shaking me by my ankles—
I lived, didn’t I? Swimming across the river and
Back, carrying the frog-girl, buoyed by the
Belief I’d outlast the wandering thalweg,
Eating red berries that taste of men’s cologne
And grapefruit rind. Alive, alive, alive! Repeat
A word so many times and it surrenders all
Definition, shapelessly transmuted into the dark,
Round seed wombed within the crimson berry—
Mantras that sound like home, home, home—
Perhaps some day recalling where we’re from.
September 19, 2023
All Of Autumn
These scattered prairie clouds—
Such blush! Oh, the pink
Brightening of autumn, drought-
Dusted leaves muddy with September
Rain. Do you remember the rain?
It pours sometimes, doesn’t it—
Always in the past. Always in
Some brighter moment which is
Not now—I’ve heard you grumble!
Look. The greening pastures
Engorged with sweetness. Look.
The final blue moon—that is, until
The next blue moon. Or the super moon.
Distractions to occupy an evening.
Look! The leaping brook was a trickle
But now it leaps once more, decorated
With opalescent minnows and goldenrod
Pollen. Where does it go, oxbowed
Narration, those long-winding stories
We all adore. And when, reflecting,
We see our own faces in the pink-
Clouded water, we recite: “Yes! I
Remember that day. I do! Five years
Ago like yesterday—but I can’t precisely
Recall what we said, or what she was
Wearing. If I could go back I’d breathe so
Deeply, inhaling all of autumn, never
Displacing a cinnamon fleck of her hazel eyes.”
August 20, 2023
Hugging Tree
Hold this tree for me, I’ll be right
Back—Hampstead Heath Sunday
Oaked, fruited with notes of kite
And dock, body of hand-smoothed
Bark and a crisp, mossy finish. So
Many hands have worn this living
Wood, so many lingering fingers
Grasping the limbs and swinging
Swaying, leaving the limbs love-
Slick. The girl doesn’t want to
Climb the tree until she does, then
She never wants to come down.
Oh, hold her by the hips English
Oak, ancient girth, mineralizing
Millenia. Hold her, breathing your
Breadth, her cheek pressed flush
Against you. Held by a tree. You’ve
Heard of tree huggers, but never
Hugging trees? Well wake, up
In the branches where blue-feathered
Birds perch; where, in the distance
Men are disassembling the Ferris
Wheel into cumbersome parts, only
To be rebuilt, restored, rejuvenated,
Where the carnival never ends
But is ever-blown through the treetops
Of finger-tipped oaks—that is if
You’re inclined to climb, or look up,
The rattling, black choke of London
Dissolving as it does in New York,
Peoria, within your own central park,
The swaying skies filled with climbers.
June 28, 2023
Trail Of Feathers
I’ve been walking a trail of feathers
For days along the black, nettled canal
Rich with blue fishes, flashing damsel
Flies, umbelliferous elder surrendering
Rhubarb stalks to the flat feet of swans.
How long have I been walking? Not far,
Just as long as I can recall. Everyone knows
Our memory is the most unreliable
Witness of all—Blue fishes in rise forms,
Waking, breaking the surface to reveal mottled
Green backs. How long have I breathed
The lacy air, creamed with thick perfumes?
Feathers fall from a gray cloudless sky,
Adorning the path until a girl collects them,
Peacocking a plain post. She knows how to walk
Too, how to breathe, allowing herself to be filled
With space, noting the green fishes of the canal,
The blood red swans, hopping yellow toads flung
Joyfully across the path, and her blue-haired dog
Bounding, framed against an iridescent lemon sky.
Forrest Pritchard's Blog
- Forrest Pritchard's profile
- 26 followers
