others in the ****** ascended
to their white, breathing heavens
one by one, as if saying goodbye,
to them, was a solitary act
leaving him alone,
on the high branch--he did not fall
when gusts shook the oak, though
during stillness, he dropped
to the next leafless limb,
there waiting for him patiently,
drenched in sunlight that made
the crow's coat glisten
soon clouds blocked the sun,
downdrafts pounded the tree;
he did not fall, until
the skies cleared
then, to the lowest limb
he descended, now but feet above
a blanket of leaves, soon
to be his bed
other creatures would come, communing
with him in their way: his flesh becoming
their flesh, a sacred chemistry for all life,
after its pitiless descent to death