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Page 1: At the Rim of the Horizon

At the Rim of the Horizon

Ruby R. Wilson

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Tall stalks of big bluestem, stiff sunflower,

curled dock, fuzzy goldenrod

“November Bouquet”

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and milkweed, whose feminine podsare turned, some up like a cupped hand

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others down like an umbrella

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some sideways, pregnant with seedsthat look like tiny pheasant feathers

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each seed attached to a silky parachute

that will shed and floatwith every draft of air that stirs

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to sparkle in the orangelight of the setting sun

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I start with a cup of raw great northern beans

add carrots, celery, tomato saucesimmer, stir, and taste

“In My Kitchen”

I make poems sometimes

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Other days, the poem starts with potato water

honey, yeast, and flour

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These poems usually don’t last too long

 but they’re delicious

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At the Rim of the Horizon

by Ruby R. Wilson

Ruby Wilson writes of making poems in her kitchen: “with potato water/ honey, yeast and flour.” These poems are accessible but never simplistic. They speak to each one of us in their richness of detail.”

— Linda Hasselstrom, Dirt Songs and others: www.windbreakhouse.com

Also available at:

• Amazon.com• The South Dakota Agricultural

Heritage Museum• The South Dakota Art Museum

Published by Finishing Line Press

https://finishinglinepress.com/

In At the Rim of the Horizon, Ruby R. Wilson pays attention. She zeros in on remnants of the South Dakota prairie—its grasses and transcendent skies—to cull ordinary, beautiful moments for poems.

— Christine Stewart-Nuñez, author of Keeping Them Alive