A Response to a Pair of Forest Plots
is my assignment. But all the firs
in the first that was clear-cut and
replanted huddle thick together
exactly alike, exactly where twenty
years ago each was boot-stamped
to grow into this big dark box.
And while the second was thinned
then—less crowded with intent, a little light
spilling through—I can’t help
but see every sizable tree still grows
right where someone
shook a rattle can and sprayed.
Something else entirely
here in the roadside ditch
in blue ruffled dabs
among the untidy
grasses—wild
irises, where I kneel
to better see
white starbursts veined
with lines thin as moth legs
upon the splayed sepals—
and feel the slight space
held by the petals
that curl up and in like
tongues toward one other,
touch
without touching,
and hold.
DEREK SHEFFIELD’s collection, Not for Luck, was selected by Mark Doty for the Wheelbarrow Books Poetry Prize. Read More
Derek Sheffield’s poem “A Response to a Pair of Forest Plots” was previously published in Not for Luck (MSU Press, 2021) and is reprinted here by permission of the author.