Crossing the Swamp

After about an hour hiking the swamp,

I knew.  A week’s rains flooded out the trail.  

Tall sameness of pines stood round me.  Stagnant water,

coffee dark, spread before me.  My new boots

stamped sucking cleats to nowhere on red mud.

I knew!  But first, denial.  Was I really lost?

 

My damp, illegible map replied: You’re lost.

Sour, rotting silt smells bubbled from the swamp.

I waded in, my walking rod probing soft mud.

Scanning the opposite shore, I see the trail,

I thought, I’ll wade it. Slowly, though, my boots

began sinking.  Soon I was shin-deep in water.

 

A dirty rag bobbing quietly on the water

squeaked and vanished.  A muskrat? Startled, I lost

balance, arms flailing helplessly, my boots

still stuck, then flopped with a loud splash.  White swamp

egrets scattered.  I clambered up, looked: the trail

waited, no closer.  How could I slosh dense mud

 

to get there?  Cypress domes bulged out of mud.

I grabbed those, linking dots through murky water,

totally soaked by now, strewing a trail

of gear—hat, vest—any weight to spare.  I lost

my sense of place, sweat blinding my eyes.  A swamp

root yanked me underwater by a boot’s

 

strap—I thrashed free, frantically kicking both boots,

till I surfaced, gasping like a fish in mud.

The bottom was deeper now.  I swam the swamp

dogpaddling.  A snake scared by my churning water

skimmed away.  Panicked, I swung at it and lost

my walking rod, kept paddling, struggling, the trail

 

yards off.  Legs and arms burning, I touched the trail

when pebbly bottom suddenly struck my boots.

Dripping, I rose like a Swamp Thing—not lost,

not needing to write my epitaph in mud.

I threw my head back, drained the dregs of my water

bottle then, laughing, tossed it at the swamp.

 

Resuming the trail, I swore by the crusted mud

of my boots, by that dank baptismal water,

I’d never been lost a moment in the swamp.

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