Still Life with Canoe I edged the canoe along a quiet margin of the river where the current slowed almost to a standstill. Immersed in the bright summer air, breathing felt light, body safe, buoyed in the sturdy shell of the hull. From a secret spot in a steadfast tree on the wild bank, a single chirp of unfinished birdsong plucked the stillness. My paddle laid across the gunwales dripping slow glassy drops into the clear shallows. Water bugs moved like Jesus walking on the water. There were no extravagant miracles that day. Just the day itself, alive and reckless with peace.
Charles Lewis writes poetry as a way of knowing and unknowing, as prayer and meditation, to share language and feeling, for fun, and because it’s necessary.

Excellent evocation; the word choices recreate the stillness of the poet’s experience.
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