I gaze at the Pacific and don’t expect to ever see the heads on Easter Island,
though I guess at sunlight rippling the yellow grasses sloping to shore;
yesterday a doe ate grass in the orchard: it lifted its ears and stopped eating
when it sensed us watching from a glass hallway—in his sleep, a veteran
sweats, defusing a land mine. On the globe, I mark the Battle of
the Coral Sea—no one frets at that now. A poem can never be too dark,
I nod and, staring at the Kenai, hear ice breaking up along an inlet;
yesterday a coyote trotted across my headlights and turned his head
but didn’t break stride; that’s how I want to live on this planet:
alive to a rabbit at a glass door— and flower where there is no flower.
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