Daye Phillippo: If recollecting were forgetting…


I both would and wouldn’t recall looking out the south window,
          March, midday while talking on the phone and seeing

two deer and then two more, loping in from the south field, 
           each, in turn, leaping over the gravel drive

where it curves as if it were a rocky riverbed flowing around
          the unfenced field, posts and barbed wire pulled out

years ago. If recollecting were forgetting, the gambrel barn
          might forget its hundred-fifty years of history, weather

and seismic shifts, and stand up tall again, no gaps for bats
           or swallows to fly in, or perhaps the barn wouldn’t be there

at all, the settlers not yet arrived, the land still roamed by bison
          and people of the Miami tribe, passenger pigeons coursing

in great flocks that darken the sun. If recollecting were forgetting,
          like four deer, I, too, might be able to leap

over the histories of things and go on loping, beautifully,
          and with ease into the east field.


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