
In Which the River Takes
When approaching a river, she told me
to always look down, to watch out
for chunks of rough rock that could
catch a toe & hurl me to the bank,
rolling the small body I was into
a current that didn’t know what it meant
to be flesh, what it meant to lose
& grieve. My mother aged near
the river, made a home beyond
the pines, watching her toes as she
stepped through thorns, deadly night-
shade’s purple bells. Year by year
she slipped into a drinking darkness,
lost in effluvium. In deference
to royalty, peasants look at their feet.
Out here, rivers reign, risen waters
command reverence each spring.
I loved my mother’s river, even
in April fury, even when I couldn’t
say it. When she died, she died close
to the water. I stepped to her bed
& heard roaring depths. I saw her
washed away. I didn’t reach out. I stared
at my feet, scared I too would drown.
Mike Bove is the author of four books of poetry, most recently EYE (Spuyten
Duyvil, 2023). His poems have appeared in Rattle, Southern Humanities Review,
Poetry East, and many other places. He served as a 2024 Writer-in-Residence at
Acadia National Park and is Editor for Hole in the Head Review.