M L Williams – Red River Valley

Williams LE P&W Vol 7 Nov-Dec 2025

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Live Encounters Poetry & Writing 16th Anniversary Volume Seven
November- December 2025

Red River Valley, poem by M L Williams.


Red River Valley

From this valley they say you are going,
We will miss your bright eyes and sweet smile.

Wind so strong I stopped the car
and looked up at a cliff outside Wichita Falls
and the spray of dust, dusk closing in,
and then again headed north and someway
crossed the Red River without knowing
how far I was from Byrdtown
driving from Georgia to Colorado Springs
to meet a fabric artist who found me online,
without knowing I’d crossed that river
or that its flow bled just north
of where my father was born
and where his father’s mule and wagon
hauled to the south bank
to float the cotton they grew
downriver in barges to the Gulf.
Because I was oblivious, I have to imagine
the red tint of the current I didn’t stop to see
and the dirt roads and plank shacks
like one they shivered in all winter
or pressing gauze on boll-pricked fingers
or huddling around the stove, boiled beans
with onions in an iron pot, collard greens,
a pan of warm biscuits, but I don’t need
to imagine the hard wind, the sting
of dust in my eyes. I stopped
and stepped out into it without knowing.

Narcolepsy

Burned black as coal
countless rise, dead souls
in the dead of night
from the atomic bombing mandala.
—Yamaguchi Tsutomu

Sleeping on the couch in a baseball cap
in front of Nana’s television, his breath
heavy, almost snoring, my uncle dreams
of long fly balls, I suppose, or nails—he is
a roofer—, or birds—he has an aviary,
raises canaries and cockatiels and shows them,
wins awards. We talk about him
as if he isn’t there, joke that he falls
asleep mid-sentence, so maybe he
dreams of the sentence’s end,
and because no one can recall how it started,
his dream must be like being stuck
in a poem, an exquisite corpse, perhaps,
enjambment as finale.

Years later I learn of an infidelity
and suppose he may have been dreaming
of his youth, falling in love
with his brother’s wife, who became his,
and I learn he served on a dive bomber,
so he may have dreamed of flight,
engines screaming, green islands
in the glittering Pacific erupting
fire and earth and death. His obituary
mentions love of birds and his fame
in that community, his World War II medals,
his heroism, that he was on the ground
in Nagasaki the day after it was bombed.
He never talked about the war or Japan,
so now I must suppose that every sentence
his sleep interrupted could only end in nightmare
on a couch in front of a black and white TV.


Tree of Grace

I read about AI
composing better
college essays, writing poems
preferred for “beauty”
and for “rhythm”
by “non-expert” readers,
according to Nature.

“Language speaks,”
said the Nazi
Heidegger, his quaint
and perfect hamlets
absent of anyone
who could lay its stones,
no one to build
his bridge envisioned
over the perfect brook.

We pace supermarket
aisles for red globes
of ripe tomatoes, grapes,
rough avocadoes, heads
of Romaine, sweet
onions picked and thighs
of chickens boned
by hands we choose
not to see or name.


© M L Williams

M L Williams is the author of Game (What Books Press), the chapbook Other Medicines, and coeditor of How Much Earth: The Fresno Poets. His poetry and prose has appeared in Salt, Western Humanities Review, Hubbub, Plume, Miramar, The Journal of Florida Studies, The Cortland Review, Rattapallax, Quarterly West and elsewhere. He teaches creative writing and contemporary literature at Valdosta State University in Georgia.

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