Crooked tree trunks resist the frame’s order.

They rise from swamp water like the spindled

arms of some chthonic creature

pulled from the shadows concealed

in the mud of our unconscious.

In the foreground, she looks behind, long neck

and thin legs rendered in a swept stroke

I imagine he drew with studied elegance,

resisting a quick flourish. Avian,

his hands moved like tiny white birds.

No kinetic frenzy on canvas, this life

study reveals intent in color, a rendered

ancestor of lizards that once tread

an earth not so different from the swamped

background. Now, a burst of purple and blue,

white filigree, feet so light they don’t leave

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imprints in sand. The colors pull the eyes

and resolve the muddy past, where the heron

could take flight, were it real, to escape.

This story appears in the March 2026 issue of Deseret Magazine. Learn more about how to subscribe.

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