Elf owl1, cactus2 wren3, fruit flies incubating
In the only womb they'll ever recognize.
Shadow for the sand rat, spines4
And barbary ribs5 clenched6 with green wax.
Seven thousand thorns, each a water slide,
A wooden tongue licking the air dry.
Inside, early morning mist captured intact,
The taste of drizzle7 sucked
And sunsplit. Whistle
Of the red-tailed hawk8 at midnight, rush
Of the leaf-nosed bat, the soft slip
Of fog easing through sand held in tandem9.
Counting, the vertigo10 of its attitudes
Across the evening; in the wood of its latticed bones
The eye sockets11 of every saint of thirst;
In the gullet of each night-blooming flowerthe crucifix
Of the arid12.
In its core, a monastery13 of cells, a brotherhood14
Of electrons, a column of expanding darkness
Where matter migrates and sparks whorl,
And travel has no direction, where distance
Bends backward over itself and the ascension
Of Venus, the stability of Polaris, are crucial.
The cactus, containing
Whatever can be said to be there,
Plus the measurable tremble of its association
With all those who have been counting.