Morning doesn’t yet know
it is morning.
Mist rises
like an unfinished thought.
Beneath the old firs,
the mule deer moves
with the caution of one
who listens to time
dripping through the moss.
His hooves meet
the wet earth
with a grace that contradicts
the weight of being alive.
The moss breathes on bark
like an ancient skin.
Branches bend slightly,
attuned to the soft passage
of a body that belongs.
He stops.
The air between us is a bridge
built of what’s not said.
Then—something calls.
Maybe the echo of a hidden spring,
maybe just the memory of being wild.
In one motion,
he breaks into a run—
downward,
toward the deep valley
where the forest folds into itself
and everything returns
to what does not need a name.
One response
This is so beautiful, so redolent of what we feel and see in the forest. I love this, it speaks to me with all the soft gentleness of the wild in Nature.