Page 8 The Clarion Literary Supplement Tuesday, April 26, 1983 m Photograph by Cherl Harrison Brown Mountain Lights The road oxbows around a grass island; a hill clips it to the right. Moving south, its gray flatness fades into immense black, a gap narrowing in the treeline. It takes minutes to see that. Darkness strains between a shout and its echo. A light angles down the former slope, dipping inside the mountain, surging closer in blinding mitosis — a star that novas into double suns. The car turns off the parkway, swinging an awkward arc through the trees; headlight beams collapse, after images of catching the day full-face. The wind whirs stiff weeds. Other cars aim a broadside of dirty grill and glass out over the blue foxfire of Blowing Rock, past the dull haze of Lenoir to the foothill called Brown Mountain. The overlook is quiet; people whisper inside cars. Some stand stiff-armed beside their trucks, hands deep in pockets, shoulders hunched. A cloudless white-breath night. Two miles off a yellow spot appears then wanes. Another, flashing, rolls easily at a slope then shoots skyward. Three white ones burn out slowly, dim to bright to dim again, vanish. In the rubber comfort of cars these images dissolve into brain. Some neck and guess; skeptics out-logic the proofs; still others accept the legend: a batch of incandescent moonshine in quart jars glittering by the mash-tub. The Lights tumble until morning, signaling to empty overlooks and trees, needing no viewers, giving nothing to locomotives left trackless in a flood a hundred years ago, to imagined streetlamps and cars driving on roads never built, or to fires burning all night on smokeless green hills. Ken Chamlee I watched the shadow fade away and I knew I’d never touch the origin of that shadow - the one I loved so much. But shadows are deceiving Sometimes big — sometimes small Still yet there are shadows with no origin at all. Robert Hopkins Ax Helve Remembered Mr. Frost, I’ve watched ivory curls of hickory drop to floor from plane that coaxed the hard, firm grain into handle smooth enough for hand to grip the wood and in a swing slide to handle butt without thought of hurting flesh. I’ve smelled shavings’ aroma like hickory nuts that on a breezy autumn drop from limbs unclothing to the ground crisp and warmly covered brown-gold by leaves so glorious in smell and sound my foot longs each October to toss again, to hear the crackle and the rustle, to awaken the calling fragrance of autumn leaves and hickory nuts. I’ve smelled the strong burn kindled by ivory curled shavings when tongues of fire danced and frolicked upward in space-casting glow from warm brick hearth; there’s no hotter endurance than hickory- logs piled at even bring bright glow heat ’til morn. I’ve watched muscled sinews stretch and pull in weathered arms shaping ax helve from pole of hickory bough; his frame shaped and strengthened by seasons of living with nature. Like the hickory-clean, tall, enduring he grew, and no one better than he knew the strength the limb took, the wear the limb gave, the night hours it took to shave by degrees the hard-grained wood until at last the artwork stood ax helve exacted by eye and strength, ax helve to lend enduring strength together nature’s pair to wrest the living in tune with nature’s giving. Mozelle Vickers Photograph by Chris Perry