APRIL 1

Elizabeth Paulette-Coughlin


Early Spring in the Vale

For weeks

we listened from our beds,

the lake’s screech and moan—

a feral animal in heat—

                       or a young mother

about to deliver—

                             what?

This week      ice calving,

gush of water like geysers—

one red canoe pushes

through the newly opened

body and black liquid

Trillium greens dot the forest floors

beside our cottage 

From bits of string and grasses

a mourning dove fashions

her nest in our crabapple—

her wings stir the morning air,

so pungent —    ripe

with the smell of compost,

last fall’s leaves 

and moist soil

As we, like children again,

rubber boot down our mucky road,

the lilac’s hard buds

still dream

their honeyed fragrance

In my garden 

yellow tulips

are sultans’ caps—

no—

tiny finches

ready to open—

                      fly 

                      into Spring!


Elizabeth Paulette-Coughlin is an ecopoet and writer living in Montreal and Vale Perkins, Quebec. Her studies in ecopoetics and ecopsychology have influenced much of her work, and the natural world has served as her Guide since childhood. She has published poems in many chapbooks and anthologies. Boneset and Yarrow, a haiku collection, was published in 2024. Words of Summer, her tanka-like conversation with poet Jennifer Boire will be published in April 2026. 


All through the month of April, we’re sharing a poem a day, celebrating the vibrant voices of our local poets writing in English. This initiative is coordinated by Angela Leuck, publisher of Shoreline Press.

Join us as we explore the creativity and stories of our community, one poem at a time.

See all the poems from our April 2026 ‘Poem a day’ series here.