Refuge

The owls had staked their territory just beyond one of the bends in the Bear River. Whenever I drove to the Bird Refuge, I stopped at their place first and sat on the edge of the road and watched. They would fly around me, their wings sometimes spanning two feet. Undulating from post to post, they would distract me from their nest. Just under a foot long, they have a body of feathers the color of wheat, balanced on two long, spindly legs. They can burn grasses with their stare. Yellow eyes magnifying light.

Terry Tempest Williams

Poem: Refuge

Poem: Refuge

Poem: Refuge

Poem: Refuge

Poem: Refuge

Poem: Refuge

Poem: Refuge Temple

Poem: Brief Refuge

Poem: Little Ending

Poem: Loving Working

Poem: Ways to Disappear

Poem: How to Regain Your Soul

Poem: Being a Person

Poem: It is Enough to Enter

Poem: There You Are

Poem: Please Call Me By My True Names

Poem: The Journey

Poem: Miracle Fish

Poem: Sleeping in the Forest

Poem: I am not i

Poem: The Summer Day

Poem: At the Un-National Monument along the Canadian Border

Poem: Tenth Birthday

Poem: [i thank you God for most this amazing]

Poem: 44th Birthday Evening, at Harris’s

Poem: When Death Comes

Poem: On the Pulse of Morning

Poem: In Praise of My Bed

Poem: Aimless Love

Poem: Housewarming

Poem: Stopping By Woods On a Snowy Evening

Poem: Dividend of the Social Opt Out

Poem: The Last Things I’ll Remember

Poem: The Sacred

Poem: How to Be a Poet

Poem: Lost

Poem: The House of Belonging

Poem: In the space where there is nothing

Poem: Wild Geese

Refuge

What’s your refuge?