Sweet field mouse, I see you, you ever-more-clever,
wall-storer, floor-joist-walker, sable-backed snack-thief,
peering back with your shining black-bead eyes
at this foolish human. You, with your cartographic snout,
capable of mapping your way to a crumb hidden
behind cupboard doors and steel walls, who capture
a tasty treasure and travel through plaster and dust
past large sleeping mammals whose incisors
are longer than your head, back to your small
and writhing pink children, who are tucked in a nest
of dryer lint in the sleeve of the leaf-packed gutter,
the soft lint, stealthily stolen from the trash bin,
in order to warm their hairless, squinty, no-bigger-
than-my-thumbnail bodies. Oh field mouse, I am not
mad. I am willing to share. In these late Holocene,
dread-packed days, where far too many are suffering,
where I have built a house on what was once your field,
I only pray: May the pest trucks pass you by. May the river
of chemicals slow to a trickle and instead may your
saucer-eared family drink from a clear stream of water pouring
over rock while a nontoxic breeze combs through the trees,
and may we both thrive in the truly wild once again.