The Maier Museum of Art
at Randolph College

“Of April” by Steve Wilson

John James Audubon, Marsh Wren (from The Birds of America), 1830, engraving on paper.

John James Audubon, Marsh Wren (from The Birds of America), 1830, engraving on paper. Bequest of Charlotte Stephenson Oresman ’41, in memory of her mother, Elizabeth Jackson Stephenson, Class of 1907, in honor of her sister, Mabel Stephenson Haemmel ’46, 1979. Collection of the Maier Museum of Art at Randolph College, founded as Randolph-Macon Woman’s College.

after Marsh Wren by John James Audobon

like light

down a canyon,

like treefall,

thought

opens itself

on spring –

marsh wrens

chittering

from the rushes

 

 


Recent poems by Steve Wilson are out or forthcoming in such journals as Beloit Poetry Journal, Borderlands, Commonweal, Poem, Georgetown Review, North American Review, America, The Christian Science Monitor, Blue Unicorn, New Orleans Review, The Christian Century, New American Writing, Isotope: A Journal of Literary Nature and Science Writing, Midwest Quarterly, The Wallace Stevens Journal, and New Letters; as well as in a number of anthologies, including O Taste and See: Food Poems (Bottom Dog Press), Visiting Frost: Poems Inspired by Robert Frost (University of Iowa), Stories from Where We Live: The Gulf Coast (Milkweed Editions), Like Thunder:  Poets Respond to Violence in America (University of Iowa), What Have You Lost? (Greenwillow), American Diaspora:  Poetry of Displacement (University of Iowa), An Introduction to the Prose Poem (Firewheel Editions), Beloved on the Earth: 150 Poems of Grief and Gratitude (Holy Cow! Press), Classifieds: An Anthology of Prose Poems (Equinox), Improbable Worlds: An Anthology of Texas and Louisiana Poets (Mutabilis) and Going Down Grand: Poetry of the Grand Canyon (Lithic).  His books include Allegory Dance and The Singapore Express and The Lost Seventh.