Undersky Sleeping, BonekeepingA Poem by Robert Ronnow
In the holy spot
with a sitting rock, an oak. In back shagbark hickory and maple. Ants climb the rock. August, birds celebrate flowering weeds, the seeds of autumn to come. I am here to name it and know it and help it to grow. These mountains are my grave. A good grave to go to. The crows have been in conference, again. A jay, blue, pokes a hole through reality. I find sumacs fruiting and the male sex organs of the Queen Anne’s lace. Juncos glean the lawn, an occasional nuthatch in the butternut. I hear a pileated woodpecker jackhammering and my neighbor’s skill saw chirring. Ants crawl on connecting interlacing instructions. © 2025 Robert Ronnow |
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Added on December 25, 2014 Last Updated on June 6, 2025 |

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