Lost Overnight in the Woods
The horizon garrottes the twilight’s throat. I sleep-walk
through slash and over deadfall. My arms, white canes,
antenna me through copses; touching tree-trunks,
legs of huge tenebrios, whose abdomens
are canopies of darkness under elytra,
I walk. Winds whisper mantra after mantra.
Now branches frieze the sky—wrought-iron frost-work
Cistines the darkling beetles’ undersides.
I see an Agincourt arrow, a kingfisher, flash-track,
grey, but fletched with blurs of blues and reds,
through ribs of fallen trees that cage a reach
where swans' necks question whether day will break.
A bull-elk rears. His forelegs scissor the moon-rays.
He splashes down, legs thrashing the water, then dips
his head in the glister, raises his rack like a sunrise,
shakes it, smithereening his crown, then grasps
the horizon’s rope in his antlers; with a swing and a sling,
throws bolas at darkness’s legs and unstrangles the sun.
Links:
[1] https://www.ablemuse.com/v8/poetry/john-beaton/wildfire
[2] https://www.ablemuse.com/v8/poetry/john-beaton/baying-two-moons