Above Lake Zoar
Leave a commentApril 29, 2026 by The Citron Review
by Alex MacConochie
The bark stands out from the tree.
Press a palm against a lightning scar,
Slip your pinkie in between
The smooth cool bole and the hexagon scales.
Inhale. Really stand here,
Really deeply let a pine grove on a hill above a reservoir
In mid-November in. The red
Small berries in their open yellow husks
That look like flowers from a distance
Shrivel on the branch, the
Resinous full sweetness is a shout,
Ignite me at the bottom of the lungs, where we
Had meant to meet each other acres are a dark gray plume,
The roots of this specific tilted pine
Buckle up under a fieldstone wall
From a time when they were desperate,
When they would girdle trees on even land like this
And the lowland trail’s a man-deep ditch,
A washout in the deadly edge
Of a hurricane. Sudden, gone
And hard to imagine now: in heavy calm
We walk on gravel halfway out across a finger of a lake.
Invasive mussels, glass, a hardwood ghost
Riven, bored into, stripped and sculpted smooth,
A shelter once for hook-lip fish,
Rolled up close to shore and written in: Initials, plus sign, heart.
Alex MacConochie teaches neurodivergent students in northwest Connecticut and has published poems in Meridian, Tar River Poetry, Main Street Rag, and elsewhere.






