these old woods with their snags, a welter
veering downhill toward swamp. So many hollows
for nesting. And not so bad, the ugly galls
providing food. All the clearing away I once wished for,
mangled trunks, a clot of branches on the forest floor,
is not the chaos I imagined.
Rounding the pond's slew of weeds,
I see it's still there: one full-grown maple
uprooted from the bank where it should have never grown,
storm-fall in October almost twenty years ago.
Those first three falls a profusion of autumn leaves
floated on clear water, the length of tree lying there,
going gray and good enough in its lasting
for the wood ducks, an assortment of predators
and unseen, the pair of herons, their nest
somewhere up in the tangle.
That white spill of uric acid might be an owl
signing the path. Oh, I won't miss my mania for saving—
believing now the design and the killing woven in.