Timothy Pilgrim
High on Adventure's Poet Laureate
Timothy Pilgrim

July/ August 2025,
OUR 29TH YEAR

 
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ADVENTURE POETRY
By Timothy Pilgrim
 
   
 

Montana absolution, of a kind

Seattle fled, for good, I skim Missoula,
let Wisdom wait one more day,
on megrim drive to Bannack,
ghost-town shacks all sagged-in, gray.
Here, Sheriff Plummer hid in sage,
ambushed miners headed home,
stole their gold. He stashed loot,
ambled back, downed drinks with the men,
seduced their wives. Like our crooked leader,
loved himself too much. Town folks
found the truth, wouldn’t trade his life
for promised map to cache, hanged him
by Grasshopper Creek. I can learn from this —
pan for luck, find glittering dreams,
with enough whiskey become worthy,
even in my eyes. On a full moon, discover
some right way back. Or not.
Bannack’s one street still weaves with ruts,
chokes on dusk, flees each day both ways
at dusk. Total absolution, they say,
is rare, may lie only in the leaving.
I’ll be a long time leaving lies.

 

 

 

 

 

Bannack buildings, MontanaBannack buildings
by Tim Pilgrim

 
     
  Timothy Pilgrim, a native of Montana and retired university journalism professor living in Bellingham, WA, is a Pacific Northwest poet and 2018 Pushcart Prize nominee. His poems have been accepted more than 500 times by journals such as Toasted Cheese, Mad Swirl, Cirque, Santa Ana River Review, Windsor Review, Hobart, Otoliths and Prole Press in the U.S. Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom. He is the author of Mapping Water and Seduced by metaphor: Timothy Pilgrim collected published poems, which the back cover calls “a 10 on any Richter imagination scale.”