A Name
by Dennis Trudell
There is slight motion in my image of a frozen lake near
midnight in this country or Canada. It is known as Wolf
Howl
Lake because long ago a white man said that as he
looked
from a hill at its shape. There is a tavern at one edge
of the
lake. At an opposite edge, a half-hour’s walk from
there on
snow and ice, is a cabin where a man lives alone.
That’s him
walking now: with some liquor inside, the size
of a bug at this
distance. Inching across that gray oval, black
forest above,
black sky with stars above that. The glow of
tavern has
darkened two dozen of the man’s steps ago. There
is a dull
whistle of wind. From closer to him, my image
would include
the sound of boots; from closer still, the man’s
breaths. He
is about halfway across the lake, toward a short
path to his
home, its fireplace, bed, table, framed photo of a
somewhat
younger woman. He has walked this route home
often, often
before. He has not heard a wolf or wolves howl
in his life.
And yet he has never crossed this ice without
being aware of
the name where his left boot touches, his
right boot, left,
right . . .
Dennis Trudell is the author of Fragments in Us: Recent & Earlier Poems (University of Wisconsin Press). His stories and poems have appeared in many journals, including previously AGNI Online. Trudell’s poems have been reprinted in more than twenty anthologies. (5/2011)

