Her back is an ecosystem, 
algaeic and wrapped 
beneath a canopy’s sun. 
 
Arms forever up and out 
above her head—she is  
this tall. No height, 
 
no dangers below, 
will blanch the beast;  
she sees no fear. 
 
A fall will seldom kill her. 
Nun ordained to pliancy,  
she’s slowness made devotion.  
 
The monkeys run  
right by her, skitter-shows  
their onus; harpy hawks 
 
with sudden plucks 
plunge, their hunger flown.   
It is true she cannot walk 
 
—when basic need or poor luck 
grounds her, she’ll have to  
pull herself along the muck 
 
of forest floor. So she hangs,  
even after life, from branches,  
fool-like, face to sky, 
 
her backward-growing  
coat a woolish habit.   
Even at the tops 
 
of trees, she blends in.   
She is cool, and shy seeming; 
 
Her cry’s a sure  ai, ai.
C.J. Sage
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-sloth-4/