Backcountry of the Beyond
Beyond Even This      
by Maggie Anderson 
Who would have thought the afterlife would    
look so much like Ohio? A small town place,     
thickly settled among deciduous trees.     
I lived for what seemed a very short time.     
Several things did not work out.     
Casually almost, I became another one     
of the departed, but I had never imagined     
the tunnel of hot wind that pulls     
the newly dead into the dry Midwest     
and plants us like corn. I am     
not alone, but I am restless.     
There is such sorrow in these geese     
flying over, trying to find a place to land     
in the miles and miles of parking lots     
that once were soft wetlands. They seem     
as puzzled as I am about where to be.     
Often they glide, in what I guess is     
a consultation with each other,     
getting their bearings, as I do when     
I stare out my window and count up     
what I see. It's not much really:     
one buckeye tree, three white frame houses,     
one evergreen, five piles of yellow leaves.     
This is not enough for any heaven I had     
dreamed, but I am taking the long view.     
There must be a backcountry of the beyond,     
beyond even this and farther out,     
past the dark smoky city on the shore     
of Lake Erie, through the landlocked passages     
to the Great Sweetwater Seas.




