By Mary Rose O’Reilley

When I imagine my soul
I think of a bear,
shambling across tundra.
I think she’s escaped from a circus,
the scars of a ring in her nose:
fat, loping, patient, untiring bear.

Her paws slap and click
bound for the edge of Alaska.
She will plunge at last
into constellations of ice,
swimming without ideas.

Even there
I imagine her torn muzzle
bent north,
feel in my nerves
her relentless
continual
swim.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From Half Wild, p. 35.

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