Six-and-Three-Quarters Ways of Looking at Roadkill
after Wallace Stevens
I
Over the week, the baby
deer collapsed. Its body
turned into many fibers.
II
Two tawny-headed hawks raised wing
and showed thir red tails, dodging
the blur of cars on highway.
III
To a maggot, roadkill
is also home.
IV
Roadkill on the highway, roadkill
on the old city route. A family is missing
its little gray
something.
V
I don’t know why I’m stuck on the dead,
their fragile bodies & mine, flying
down Highway 25 like instinct,
like always.
VI
The squirrel never looks both ways.
It runs & runs, doesn’t stop
until it runs sweetly
under the oncoming truck’s tire.
&3/4
I weep, swerve grateful
in the rain, miss
the slew-footed green turtle
& his wise and wrinkled body. Slowly, smart,
he waits for space. I hope
he made it to some cowpond.
3 thoughts on "Six-and-Three-Quarters Ways of Looking at Roadkill"
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as I was reading this,
faint sound of radio
in the other room:
L.W. III’s
“Dead Skunk in the Middle of the Road”
😀 It’s still a good one.
I’m learning about line breaks from your poem. Also, “little gray/something” is heartbreaking.