Thursday, April 9, 2026

piedmont vs mountains

 

returning to our Smokies


seasons turn,

for three months we have found ourselves home in the piedmont,

there where we have built a life together

with careers, children, each other,


we have burned wood from our own trees

when the cold of winter got to us,

we have started tomatoes inside early February

and planted them outside mid-March,

despite the fear of frost,

along with lettuce and sugar snap peas,

end of March? potatoes, green beans,

the first summer squash, cucumbers, pumpkins,


the trees around us, once hesitant

are halfway to near full leaf now,


we decide it is time to return to the Smokies,

the home of our heart,

spring here is much more hesitant high up the trees,

but spring here is much more luxuriant on the ground beneath:

phacelia, phlox, white and yellow trillium,

make their "hay" while the sun can get to them,


our souls and bodies now are more of autumn,

anticipating the freeze coming soon,

our hearts are still of the spring,

the ephemeral means even more to us

as we feel the ephemeral in our own bones.


by Henry H. Walker

March 31, ‘26

the cabin as expression of connection


 to love the earth


Lao Tsu reminds us to "love the earth" in our dwellings,


our Smoky Mountain retreat, 

what we call "the cabin,"

is a comfortable house: a good place to sit, sleep, eat, visit,

with window and porch and attitude

oriented to the rushing murmur of the clear creek flowing by,

all within the touch of the great forest

that owns this section of the Appalachian range massif,

the close-by rhododendron, beech, buckeye, sycamore,

have been my friends since childhood,


















we have filled the walls with photos of named flowers,

of the ubiquitous bears and the occasional heron,

of the great mountain above, called "Walasiyi" by the Cherokee,

and photos of the family whose lives enrich us all,

while the earth and nature literally ground us,


we need to commit ourselves to a covenant 

within which we remember to be larger

than our finite years,

for we are also of the infinite, as Lao Tsu reminds us,


I started this writing because a friend gifted me

a great hornet nest from the Blue Ridge Parkway,

the dry remnant of a great colony,

scary in its prime,

I want to display it in our cabin,

I fear, though, that, rather than embracing

this creation from our long-distant cousins,

they who created this brooding home,

visitors at the cabin might instead fear,


for what we do not control can be frightening,


if we must "love the earth,"

we must trust that that means reaching for the larger self

toward which the best of all religions aches,

we need to expand and not limit who we are,


still, I do not yet know if displaying the great hornet nest

will move us forward, or into retreat from the unknown, 

and into fear rather than the desired awe.


by Henry H. Walker

April 4, ‘26

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

evolving the self

 

the gift of ignorance


what do we really know of another?

let alone, what do we ever really know of our self?

what do we really know at all?

we live in ignorance,

and we can easily convince ourselves 

instead that "we've got it,"


I feel that my father gave me a great gift,

the wisdom to embrace

the realizing that we are ignorant,

for then we have a hole that can be filled,

questions arise that thirst for answers,

and we become more of value

as understanding starts to fill the hole,

and our thirst is assuaged for awhile,


too much sureness is dangerous,

for then we are not curious,


it is in being curious and seeking to know better

that the evolution of our self stumbles forward.


by Henry H. Walker

April 2, ‘26

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

reprising creation

 

the artist within


there is the soul of an artist within each of us,

one who sees a rightness that can exist

and hopes to make it so,


I look at a magnificent bluff in Utah,

and I see pattern that aches to be noticed,

I see petroglyphs that ache to make it so,
























































this artist within grasps burgeoning pattern

and feels how it can come together,

upon paper, upon the stage,

within things that we make,

in whatever crafting of beauty we undertake,

with whatever tools are available,

and then it can be so,


for me, words are my tools,

I build frameworks to hold 

as much of what reveals itself to me

as I can contain within the net I build with words,


I still wonder about the source of the creative impulse,

something in the universe loves the building

of the random into complexity, chaos into order,


our pink dogwood spent the winter with tight terminal buds,

and now each bud releases the flower within,

to manifest as the flower without,

every blossom is defiance against entropy,

order against meaninglessness,

and, in the noticing, joy should coalesce within us,
























we should notice, and mark, and commemorate

what we can know and celebrate

as order and meaning strive hard to birth themselves

into the world we all share,

the artist within can then exult

in every reprise of creation itself

however true or clumsy that reprise might be.


by Henry H. Walker

March 26, ‘26