The Supple Deer

The quiet opening
between fence strands
perhaps eighteen inches.

Antlers to hind hooves,
four feet off the ground,
the deer poured through it.

No tuft of the coarse white belly hair left behind.

I don’t know how a stag turns
into a stream, an arc of water.
I have never felt such accurate envy.

Not of the deer—

To be that porous, to have such largeness pass through me.

Jane Hirshfield’s sixth poetry collection, After, was named a “best book of 2006” by the Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, and England’s Financial Times.