What the Red Fox Says
Supposedly we bark, but rarely do.
Why would one need to ever speak so harshly
when you have whiskers that radar, help you navigate
a true line straight through the woods
even on blackest night?
Foxes do not wander, but walk with purpose.
We do not seek attention, acclaim, or affirmation,
but quite the opposite:
we are ghosts of daytime light,
hearing so keen we track voles burrowing beneath.
You probably imagined us saying something simple:
“Dig deep into what rumbles beneath you.
Find your other and mate in February
so you have Christmas babies.”
But one fall day in our woods
you walked over a rise
just a few feet from where
I dug for mice in a sawdust pile.
We both levitated
Up and back a foot or more,
--you in Joy, at the miracle
of my magical auburn fur
--me in embarrassment
at the failure that shamed my gifts.
In that split second our eyes locked,
I saw “red” flash in your thoughts.
Did you mean
red from shame
or red with rage?
Were you simply focusing my attention
to the color of berries, blooms and birds?
No, it must be blood and my glorious fur,
of course, the colors of Life and Death.
Creation breathes out
only a word at a time to me.
So I spoke a psalm to you
letting you carry it away
like the stone from the creekbank:
We are here to haunt,
quantum Beauty and Joy
that only exists when observed,
our red particles assembling
from dust, light, frantic atoms,
apparitions without the Dark,
without the dread or grief,
you before you were born,
you as merely a theory,
you without Words
in the vast bliss of silence
before the red,
before the craving, striving,
before longing.
We are the Quiet.
Rita Quillen’s most recent poetry book, Some Notes You Hold (Madville 2020) has received a Bronze Medal from the Feathered Quill Book Awards, a finalist listing for poetry in the American Writing Awards, and is a Bonus Book for the 2023 International Pulpwood Queens and Timber Guys Book Club. Her novel, Wayland, published by Iris Press in 2019, is the March 2022 Bonus Book of the Month for the International Pulpwood Queens and Timber Kings Book Club. It is a sequel to her first novel, Hiding Ezra (Little Creek Books, 2014).


