Willowspout
By R. T. Smith
Because someone thirsty enough 
to trust Old Testament wisdom 
followed the deepening greens 
and found a spring, silver 
in the shadow of blue ridges, 
I can kneel beneath 
this spill of willow 
limbs a century later 
and drink water 
risen from roots 
to enter the evening 
through a spout, the way 
Cherokee stories say the first 
people were born, 
washing into the world 
of such trees whose bark, 
like the water I cup 
to my parched mouth, 
tastes leafy and sweet 
and has the power, 
the old ones say, to heal.
Source: Poetry (May 2001)


