Poems by Warren Woessner

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Canoes In January

by Warren Woessner

From Canary Winter 2021-22

Warren has spent most of his literary life in the upper Mississippi and Minnesota River Valleys, once Ojibwe and Dakota land, where there is no shortage of winter.

Tipped over, summer and fall
spilled out, winter
moved into aluminum
long houses,
for Dakota ghosts.
Hulls still point
at the lake
like compass needles
point at true loss.


Previously published in Exit ~ Sky (Holy Cow! Press)



Fulcrum

by Warren Woessner

From Canary Winter 2021-22

The edge of the sun
is a warm orange disk
pushing through a web 
of bare branches.

For a moment, I can look
right at it, and turn
and find the rabbit
in the still-bright moon
setting in the west.

It is the exact day
of the middle of winter.
I am the high priest,
checking the alignment
of the altar and the two stones,

feeling the earth tilt
toward the light.
Right then and there,
I know new life will arise—
water will flow, crops
will grow; I know
I’ll be right again.


Previously published in Clear All the Rest of the Way (Backwaters Press)



Midwinter

by Warren Woessner

From Canary Winter 2021-22

At 4:45 the sun edges
through a loose nest
of branches, sets

behind a snowbank,
slipping out early
after its brief appearance

in today. But it still dazzles,
like a pearl set in diamonds
on the white breast of a girl

at a charity bazaar. Pretty,
but with a forced smile,
she leans in close,

gets me to take
one more chance
on spring.


Previously published in Clear All the Rest of the Way (Backwaters Press)



Prairie Grass – February

by Warren Woessner

From Canary Winter 2021-22

Almost touching the snowbanks,
the thin stalks are bent down
like old women walking home
from a country market, empty
early. They are holding
just a handful of seeds—
shopping baskets full of wind.


Previously published in Exit ~ Sky (Holy Cow! Press)



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