BUTTERMILK FALLS

I. Stillness

I have only seen this place once--
only one time that I remember.
Strange enough,
parts of it could almost be
twins of pictures you see
of places like Macchu Picchu
(anybody who has seenthe pictures
and the falls knows this)
or something out of a legend.

You can almost see the fallen towers
with the leafy green plans
winding around them.
The steps are worn smoooth
and slightly crumbled
next to the water
that is in deep green pools
or lies nearly still on the stone,
moving ina slow trickle.

Other people pass by,
but that's few enough so that
you feel like you could be
the only person for miles.
The lifeguards tell you
to stay on the path,
that it is too dangerous to step
inito the water.
Maybe they are right.
Sometimes
the water could sweep you along
to the bottom,
but they are wrong
when you can just stand
ankle-deep in the water
and close your eyes
to everything around you.

II. Privacy

How easy it is
to think of other things
when you are trying
to concentrate on
the scenes around you--
Macchu Picchu or medieval England--
and what youve' heard about them.

Slightly crumbled steps
with areas where you walk
worn smooth lead up to a tree
that could be a twin
for the one that supposedly
Merline sleeps under.

The Lady of the Lake cast him into
an enchanted slee,
bidding the hawthorn tree
to grow its roots
above and about him
and have the
green leafy ferns
wind around him
and the tree.
He would sleep
until he was needed again--
or so we are told.
It is not hard to believe.

Step onto a flat, sun-baked stone
and lie still on your back,
letting the water flow
over your feet.
Now you cannot
tell the diffference
between the water and your body.
You would be
the only person for miles--
if you were still really there.
Amy Aderman
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