Poet Timothy Pilgrim
High on Adventure's Poet Laureate
Timothy Pilgrim

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2022, OUR 26TH YEAR

 
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ADVENTURE POETRY
By Timothy Pilgrim
 
   
 

Sea change
 
Floe broken off, mere speck now,
bear cubs whine, drift south.
They prowl the ice.
Mom dives in, swims to them —
for quite some time.

(published by Whatcom Watch)

Still glow
(with a nod to Albert Camus)
 
Heads down, no way to say sorry,
mistake, we drag laden canoe
to the beach, paddle choppy water, 
her behind, steering. 

We churn up a narrow channel, 
hope current won’t take hold, 
sweep everything downstream. 
Camp pitched without speaking,
 
soup heated over anemic fire,
we swallow hot broth of remorse. 
Forgiveness hangs in smoke 
below sun turning cutthroat red.
 
We place sleeping bags far apart, 
try not to shiver, lie alone,
sob as meteors trail to black.
I dream I am not lost,
 
the sun casts no shadows,
and somehow I escape night.
Coals still glow at dawn. 
The canoe and she aren’t gone.

(published by Harbinger Asylum; different version, “Still glow at dawn,” published by Howl)

 

Polar bear on small ice
Courtesy Sand Hills Sentinel

Angry surf
Copyright photo by Timothy Pilgrim

 
  Timothy Pilgrim, a native of Montana and retired university journalism professor living in Bellingham, WA, is a Pacific Northwest poet and 2018 Pushcart Prize nominee. His poems have been accepted more than 500 times by journals such as Toasted Cheese, Mad Swirl, Cirque, Santa Ana River Review, Windsor Review, Hobart, Otoliths and Prole Press in the U.S. Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom. He is the author of Mapping water and Seduced by metaphor: Timothy Pilgrim collected published poems, which the back cover calls “a 10 on any Richter imagination scale.”