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First I place them in a line atop a narrow
path along the side of the house.

That path grows muddy in winter,
and the stones will keep our footsteps

clean as we come to check
on the water heater, the fuse box,

the wooden gate that sags a little under a hedge.
Then I lift each stone again

and dig for it a shallow nest,
sprinkle in a layer of sand,

and squirm the piece back into place
as if it were a golden retriever

rubbing its haunches into the dirt.
All that remains is to pat the earth

around the edges carefully,
as if to say, Good boy. Sit.

Listen to a conversation about this poem on the Reformed Journal Podcast.

Photo by Luis Rodriguez on Unsplash

Paul J. Willis

Paul Willis is the author eight collections of poetry as well as a YA Elizabethan time-travel novel, All in a Garden Green (Slant, 2020) and the essay collection To Build a Trail (WordFarm, 2018). His most recent collection, Losing Streak (Kelsay Books, 2024),  is mostly light verse. He is an emeritus professor of English at Westmont College and a former poet laureate of Santa Barbara, California. His website is www.pauljwillis.com.  

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