(in memory, John Sullivan)
To see a moose
requires off handed luck,
a patience of dawns
and dusks. It requires
keeping a distance,
a kind of respect,
the season of the logans’
long grasses thickening,
Spring’s first hatch
propelling itself
from mud to air,
awkward legged,
until it’s a kingdom of bug
swarm. Casual as a god,
one steps out
from the darkening firs,
from that low lying cool
of conifer floor.
He’s young,
his rack, stubs
of furred velvet.
He’s here for the glut
of soupy weeds.
I stay until he feeds—
and is a darker shadow
within the dark, drifting back
to the black trees.
Not all loneliness is bereft.
That night in my dream blueberries edged
the lake through which my gentle,
unhurried relatives rowed
themselves back to me.
My uncle grinned a greeting.
The song in the dream
became the lake, the reflection of each leaf,
a prophesy of flocked trees, holy particularities.