Jeeping corrugated roads,
gusting through fords and slapping
boughs and saplings on the windshield,
we’re trashing through a world
we usually walk in reverence.
Today we want to eat mud and dust.
We want to render ourselves
crude as children’s drawings,
lose our superfluous depth.
The gnashing of the engine revs
in first gear. The knobby tires rip
the track and spit muck everywhere.
We enjoy this fresh new texture,
rendering an old worn surface
in the most vulgar shades of filth.
Wildlife flees as we approach—
muffled flutter and slap of paws.
We’ve never been so loud before,
never tried so hard to simplify
and fill the gap between ourselves
and landscapes we try to occupy.
Evening chill finds us splashing
through a streambed where spring trout
spawned, the current slack with drought.
The western sky blushes for us.
On the far bank we stop and shut off
the engine, stretch ourselves
after a day of jolts and grumbles.
We could lie on the moss and let
mosquitoes and blackflies avenge
the erosion we’ve inflicted.
But we have to get home and wash
the filth from our blank expressions
and try to recover ourselves
from the rough and roar of this day.
Whoever lent us this Jeep
will smirk when he sees us flat
as paper dolls. We’re satisfied
with this one day roughing it.
We’ll go home and sleep a soft sleep
and the tracks we’ve scored through
the forest will outlast us,
like signatures on cave paintings
scrawled long before we evolved.
© William Doreski
William Doreski’s work has appeared in various e and print journals and in several collections, most recently A Black River, A Dark Fall (2018).