by sarah fawn montgomery
Is it enough
to say I tried?
I could not leave
so I chose to hide.
Dug deep as claws
could bear, half-moon
black and stinking
as the rot of the fallen—
leaves, a hollowed
gourd, the weak
crow—and I know
to envy what is
still beating, escape
the encroaching cold
by building myself
a burial like the garden
beds, the way in summer
I remove the heads
to fool more flowers
but in winter I must will
myself mostly dead
in order to just survive.
Sarah Fawn Montgomery is the author of Halfway from Home (Split/Lip Press), Quite Mad: An American Pharma Memoir (The Ohio State University Press), and three poetry chapbooks. She is an Associate Professor at Bridgewater State University. You can follow her on Twitter at @SF_Montgomery.