100 points
 breaks from the blue-black
 skin of the water, dragging her shell
 with its mossy scutes
 across the shallows and through the rushes
 and over the mudflats, to the uprise,
 to the yellow sand,
 to dig with her ungainly feet
 a nest, and hunker there spewing
 her white eggs down
 into the darkness, and you think
 of her patience, her fortitude,
 her determination to complete
 what she was born to do----
 and then you realize a greater thing----
 she doesn’t consider
 what she was born to do.
 She’s only filled
 with an old blind wish.
 It isn’t even hers but came to her
 in the rain or the soft wind
 which is a gate through which her life keeps walking.
 She can’t see
 herself apart from the rest of the world
 or the world from what she must do
 every spring.
 Crawling up the high hill,
 luminous under the sand that has packed against her skin,
 she doesn’t dream
 she knows
 she is a part of the pond she lives in,
 the tall trees are her children,
 the birds that swim above her
 are tied to her by an unbreakable string.
 —“The Turtle,”
 Mary Oliver
 In what two ways does the poem’s structure match the movements of the turtle it describes?
 They both have even movements.
 They both stop and start regularly. 
 They both have uneven movements. 
 They both stop and start unevenly.
 They both are separated into three parts.