Amazon Burning
 I will never see your secret spaces 
    listen to the bold songs of birds 
    or the screeches of primate tribes 
    in trees along slow muddy waters. 
 Nor will I spy the silhouette 
    of the silent jaguar’s shadow 
    or the tentative rising of a tapir 
    or the tree-root flesh of anaconda. 
 Never will I shake the bronze hand 
    of the Yanomami, Akuntsu, Pirikuru 
    enter their dwellings and lives, gather 
    stories of lost and buried cities. 
 No, the Amazon will come to me. 
    I will breathe its ashes every day 
    and feel the burden of its absence 
    in the lungs that give me life. 
Slow Creep
 I stepped on the ghost of a mountain glacier 
    my foot grinding cinders of ancient explosions 
    where eons of snow once pressed upon the earth. 
 Every step took me closer to an apex 
    no longer glistening white, but sere and bereft 
    of a history of bountiful meltwaters feeding life. 
 And when I took the last step on the climb 
    I gazed out over browning valleys, rivers 
    of ice turning to stone littered with fish bones. 
So Long
 A honey creeper creeps no more 
    Blossoms overflowing with honey. 
 A billion years of death is nothing 
    a hundred of years of death is something. 
 Canaries, black rhinos, grebes, shrews 
    all leaving behind them a question. 
 When does the death of one affect 
    the demise of another...mystery. 
 When does the death of a frog 
    tell us what to do with how to live? 
 When the creeper no longer creeps 
    will we stop trying to feed it? 
 Habits are hard to change, as are 
    the reports of those no longer here. 
