Dan Stryk lives among the Blue Ridge Mountains of Southwest Virginia, in Bristol. He has published a number of collections of poems and prose parables, including The Artist andthe Crow (Purdue UP) and Solace of the Aging Mare (The Mid-America Press). Dimming Radiance—a fusion of Far Eastern and Western concepts and writing forms—was released by Wind Publications in fall, 2008. His work appears in Poetry, Ploughshares, Antioch Review, Shenandoah, Atlanta Review, New England Review, The Oxford American (2008 “Best of the South” issue), TriQuarterly, Harvard Review, Poetry Northwest, North American Review, Ontario Review, Western Humanities Review, Southern Humanities Review, Commonweal, Chelsea (a 7-poem portfolio in its current, and final, issue), Antigonish Review (Canada), The London Magazine (UK), Poetry Salzburg Review (Austria), Tricycle: The Buddhist Review (NY), Ecotone, and Isotope—and has been represented in anthologies such as A Year in Poetry (Crown Publishers, NY) and Common Wealth: Contemporary Poets of Virginia (U of Virginia P). He has held an NEA Poetry Fellowship and an Illinois Arts Council Individual Artist Grant (in poetry), among other writing awards.
---------
The All-day Rains
(Or peace in the truth there’s little change,
in obeisance to Old Whiskers …)
Years since our journey South
from Illinois, eager to
begin “new lives” …
There are times we’re
roused to fill our days
with changing what’s
gone stale.
Yet in still another humid
span of rain sogged Appalachian
hills,
to stay awake above this
weathered book
of poems*
dusted off this sodden
noon —
to kindle heartwarmed flashes
of a long-abandoned
past —
would be enough.
I watch my wife’s small garden
swamp, once more, below fogged
glass … her longtime
passion vanishing, again,
to red-clay
muck.
But why do all these poems
which still rouse those rustling
grainfields on the edges
of quaint towns —
transformed, in fits of prairie wind,
to the swish of giant pintos’ mains
in recollected myths
from Iriquois song —
invoking those, & other spirits,
from rich glacial lore
& deep-black loam,
like murmurs
from long-distant friends
or songs of my own making
hidden years
in my true heart,
no longer liven me?
(What’s more, there’s certainly no wanting,
here, of that soulful chug — that stirred
my youth like a beating heart —
of freight trains thudding
East and West, the deep maroon
of evening barns that fade like glowing
embers into gentle streaks of dusk, the firm oases
of small towns
that poke their clapboard vertebrae
from Saharas of soy
& corn …)
I mean I’d like to dream
more fully on this rainswept afternoon,
delve — with deeper feeling — into
remnants of my past.
Never mind — I start to drowse
again. Perhaps I’m most inspired, in this
soupy spell of days, by our thoughtless
ring-tailed housecat,
émigré from Illinois,
curled in blameless slumber
by the door?
*Heartland II: Poets of the Midwest (Ed. Lucien Stryk, NIU Press, 1975)