Behind The Blackberry Thicket
Crashing through, I find a grove,
sycamore, ash, a single maple.
The deer take refuge here unhampered
by the mass of blackberries
and goldenrod, monarchs and bees,
that excludes a thing my shape.
Between the trees
along the leaf-mold floor,
grapevines twine like Laocošn's snakes,
binding all into slow silence.
Twenty years since the astonished dog
cornered a crawdad in what I'd thought
was just another hayfield,
this wet-weather streambed,
not a place to mow or plow.
Focused on the quick –
children, garden, livestock --
I did not see this wilderness of vines
and saplings transform itself into a woods.
What seems motionless is growth and what
seems still is motion. Even my house
moves westward half an inch a year.