Healing Journey

By Ethel Mortenson Davis

At dusk I found myself hurrying through the glacial forest.
The air was warm and humid, but the clay dust cool on my feet.
I was climbing the high trail to the footbridge
that crossed the black granite waters.
The daylight was fading.
The moss-covered boulders looked like giants strewn
by some ancient glacier eons ago.
As the cold air rose around my legs,
multi-colored shells of snails crisscrossed the large tree trunks.
Water trickled down everywhere — through the moss carpet
thick with the red mushroom.

I had come here before, hoping to resolve a riddle,
but now I had a disease within my body and needed help.
Finally I reached the bridge, black and strong,
made with spaces between the floor planks wide enough
to see the great height at which I was.
The black river below looked like a black granite ribbon
glistening in the dim light.
Across the bridge I could see a clearing through the trees.
In the clearing was a large crowd of people.
Their faces were as warm as their hands.

Nightingale whispered:

These are people that have helped you
in some way throughout your life.

Then it was night.

As I went back across the bridge
the moon was beginning to shine on the water,
but within me

I felt as if the sun was beginning to rise.

2 Comments

Filed under Ethel Mortenson Davis, poems, Poetry

2 responses to “Healing Journey

  1. James Janko's avatar James Janko

    Ethel’s poems are in many ways an act of witnessing the healing power of the natural world, which we are part of. I love every word she writes.

    Janko

  2. Beautiful, eloquent, and mystical, Ethel. This is why I love your poetry.

Leave a comment