"Isle Royale Album"

by Elizabeth Bergstrom, Teen Artist-in-Residence, 2022

 
 
view of Lake Superior through towering trees
cover of "Isle Royale Album," composed by Elizabeth Bergstrom, 2022 Teen Artist-in-Residence, Isle Royale National Park

ELIZABETH BERGSTROM

 

Rock

Rex Petra or Regiis Saxum
(A Song of Isle Royale)

There is a

deep
deep

heart of dark stone
hidden in the lake,
wild waves breaking on its hard core,
unnoticeable,
except it juts out in forested miles of island rocks,
far in the great expanse of water.
An isle

of heartstone,
of deep stone,
of king’s stone,
of hard rock that we call


beautiful.

 
looking over the starboard deck of RANGER III

ELIZABETH BERGSTROM

Prelude

On the Way to Isle Royale on the Ferry Ranger Ⅲ

(A Song of Adventure)

Quiet.
Rumbling behind my eyes,
water rushes in harried bubbles bursting,
explosive,
white bubbles white wall blue rails
frothing past.
A child of raindrops
meets its people a nation strong,
a storm in the making, the original, the raging older brother,
created as the seams of the Earth split and formed anew.
We ride above ignoring your rocking warnings;
we are prepared.

 
dark clouds over dark lake, blue sky in distance

ELIZABETH BERGSTROM

First Movement: Water

Do You Hear It?

(A Song of Lake Superior)

Listen.
Even the thunder is drowned by Its roar.
The wind and sky scoop great chunks of Its depths

and throws them against the shoreline.

Its frightening joy scrapes rocks to dust

and violently quenches the Earth’s thirst;

in great heaves It vomits our boats from its stomach,
in great leaps It strikes the closest cliffs.

It thunders
and cackles
and whispers

so listen.

 

Whitecaps

(A song of the Surface of Lake Superior)

Way out beyond the bay
in the truest Superior
the waves
have grown long beards of white bubbles
They lean forward
and lose balance
and fall into their brothers with a crash,
then get back up again
so the others have someone to fall on,
until the wind pulls each wave
to the shore

 
a bench on Tobin Harbor, looking out at the lake

ELIZABETH BERGSTROM

Water

(A Song of Rain)

A swish creates a clatter of droplet voices.
Splashing surface becomes rain until rain becomes surface again —

why choose?

Water becomes all forms and none; every piece is one part of the whole.


Sometimes I envy their oneness.
It would be nice to become a peaceful part of a bigger wave,

while being free to splish a little, play a little, even drop on my outstretched hand

(more often on my nose).

They brew thunder and become darkness

before falling down to fill up our wells again.

Tame but always wild.

Sure I envy. Who wouldn’t?
Where does water go?
It gets everywhere, in every crevice and piece of air.

Water has explored the darkest oceans, the smoothest rivers, the deepest valleys.

Water has traveled everywhere we have — we carry it within us.

Water brings life and flows throughout everything,

in peace and in tides,

a wild tool of Mother Earth.

perhaps we could learn a thing or two…

 
a fly resting on a piece of wood

ELIZABETH BERGSTROM

Second Movement: Life

Fly Poem

(A Song of Muscidae)

The way a fly moves it’s almost like it’s a stop-motion animation,
it’s so jerky,
too fast for reality but too many pauses for
truth.
It washes its hands, unaware
of the irony
It lands on the picnic bench, unconcerned
by my presence
No one can ever touch a fly.
Can it predict the future
or are we living in its past?
And as always,
it leaves before I know it's gone.

 

Mosquito Song

(A song of the little ones all around)

Listen to the whispered voices of the mosquitos quietly
singing
a song of existing only for a moment,
wanting
to pass on life to new generations through the blood of their
enemies,
and friends,
and acquaintances,
whose bodies react to our unintended gift with itching…
but perhaps we can learn to appreciate
the struggle
a mother mosquito has to exist
before we slap them
and punish them as thieves and felons.
It isn’t their fault that they annoy us
and we try to avoid them
(for good reason)
but
instead of deciding to exterminate your mosquito population,
listen to their song
first.

 
lichen covered trees with a trail passing through

ELIZABETH BERGSTROM

King Lichen

(A Song of the Forest)

Lichen sprouts and shifts and spreads,
draping on trees like a shaggy mane,
and like anyone all dressed up,
they wear it proudly
but quietly.
Lichen dresses the dead trees to look alive
as they stand asleep,
held up by the weight of their roots and of the years.
Lichen eases their passing until they return to their Mother
and Lichen continues.
One could imagine
(as one does on a rainy day)
that Lichen is actually the King of the forest —
one being
presiding everywhere,
watching over the trees,
the first one to come after a fire destroys,
the pathfinder for new plants to grow,
even on the rocks and on the used-up places.
How unusual
for something to go first
willingly.
King Lichen watches over the forest
and everyone within it.

 
moss growing in the rock cleft

ELIZABETH BERGSTROM

Postlude

Still Growing

(A Song of Perseverance)

Inspired by a tiny channel in a rock in the shoreline constantly flowing with water, with a stubborn growth of moss within it
Moss is growing in a small crack in a rock on Lake Superior’s shore,
common and yet…
The rocks are surrounded by water and
the Lake licks the moss,
not caring if it wears away its roots
piece by piece.
I imagine while the storms howl
that rock is completely covered in cold water.
Barely any lichen grows;
a few brave grasses grow in clumps.
But the moss sits on wet stone
existing on the edge,
without a care,
still growing.

 

Last updated: March 20, 2024

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