There’s a bear in the Truro woods.
People have seen it - three or four,
or two, or one. I think
of the thickness of the serious woods
around the dark bowls of the Truro ponds;
I think of the blueberry fields, the blackberry tangles,
the cranberry bogs. And the sky
with its new moon, its familiar star-trails,
burns down like a brand-new heaver,
while everywhere I look on the scratchy hillsides
shadows seem to grow shoulders. Surely
a beast might be clever, be lucky, move quietly
through the woods for years, learning to stay away
from roads and houses. Common sense mutters:
it can’t be true, it must be somebody’s
runaway dog. But the seed
has been planted, and when has happiness ever
required much evidence to begin
its leaf-green breathing?
- Mary Oliver, from The Truro Bear and Other Adventures: Poems and Essays, Beacon Press, MA, 2008.
Mary Oliver, an "indefatigable guide to the natural world" according
writer Maxine Kumin, was born in 1935 in Cleveland, Ohio. She has
written numerous volumes of poetry and prose and was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1983 and the National Book Award in 1992.
She lives and writes in Provincetown, Massachusetts.