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Journey
with Jesus

Philip Booth (1925–2007)

How to See a Deer

Forget roadside crossings.
Go nowhere with guns.
Go elsewhere your own way,

lonely and wanting. Or
stay and be early:
next to deep woods

inhabit old orchards.
All clearings promise.
Sunrise is good,

and fog before sun.
Expect nothing always;
find your luck slowly.

Wait out the windfall.
Take your good time
to learn to read ferns;

make like a turtle:
downhill toward slow water.
Instructed by heron,

drink the pure silence.
Be compassed by wind.
If you quiver like aspen

trust your quick nature:
let your ear teach you
which way to listen.

You've come to assume
protective color; now
colors reform to

new shapes in your eye.
You've learned by now
to wait without waiting;

as if it were dusk
look into light falling:
in deep relief

things even out. Be
careless of nothing. See
what you see.

Philip Booth (1925–2007) was an American poet who helped found the creative writing department at Syracuse University. He’s been called “Maine’s clearest poetic voice.” He won many awards for his poetry including two Guggenheim Fellowships and a Rockefeller Foundation Award.

Selected by Amy Frykholm: amy@journeywithjesus.net



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