By Heather Christle
I am alone I am a real bear with a head full of
hazard and light I live in nature live with no
friends and no equity who needs it I have
my face I have my hands which are as I speak
mauling the air one time I took a trip I lay
horizontal on a marvelous raft I did look up
regard the blank stars and accept them as holes in
the frame one time I ran so fast I left my own
self behind my own self wandered into an old
birch and it fell over I have no escrow O
bees thou sweet kingdom of noise I worship
freely I pee on the leaves and the wind
impulses right through me like a small clean rock
all I want is the fish to glow at night when
everyone on earth is trying to reach me hello
yes hello this never happens yet other events
go on and on the dimming of the moon I am
upright I am lumbering alone with no liquidity
and I live on berries deliver me berries if later
on you glide into these wild and wilder woods
Heather Christle is the author of "What Is Amazing" (Wesleyan University Press), "The Difficult Farm" (Octopus Books, 2009) and "The Trees The Trees" (Octopus Books, 2011), which won the 2012 Believer Poetry Award. She has taught at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and at Emory University, where she was the 2009-2011 Creative Writing Fellow in Poetry. She is the web editor for jubilat and frequently a writer in residence at the Juniper Summer Writing Institute.