William Stafford

An Oregon Message

When we first moved here, pulled  
the trees in around us, curled  
our backs to the wind, no one  
had ever hit the moon—no one.
Now our trees are safer than the stars,  
and only other people’s neglect  
is our precious and abiding shell,
pierced by meteors, radar, and the telephone.
 
From our snug place we shout
religiously for attention, in order to hide:  
only silence or evasion will bring
dangerous notice, the hovering hawk
of the state, or the sudden quiet stare  
and fatal estimate of an alerted neighbor.
 
This message we smuggle out in  
its plain cover, to be opened  
quietly: Friends everywhere—
we are alive! Those moon rockets  
have missed millions of secret  
places! Best wishes.
 
Burn this.
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