Catbird
He picks his pond, and the
soft thicket of his world.
He bids his lady come, and she does,
flirting
with her tail.
He begins early, and makes up his song as he goes.
He does
not enter a house at night, or when it rains.
He is not afraid of the wind,
though he is cautious.
He watches the snake, that stripe of black
fire,
until it flows away.
He watches the hawk with her sharpest shins,
aloft
in the high tree.
He keeps his prayer under his tongue.
In his
whole life he has never missed the rising of the sun.
He dislikes
snow.
But a few raisins give him the greatest delight.
He sits in the
forelock of the lilac, or he struts
in its shadow.
He is neither the rare
plover or the brilliant bunting,
but as common as the grass.
His black cap
gives him a jaunty look, for which
we humans have learned to tilt our caps,
in envy.
When he is not singing, he is listening.
Neither have I ever seen
him with his eyes closed.
Though he may be looking at nothing more than a
cloud
it brings to his mind several dozen new remarks.
From one branch to
another, or across the path,
he dazzles with flight.
Since I see him every
morning, I have rewarded myself
the pleasure of thinking that he knows
me.
Yet never once has he answered my nod.
He seems, in fact, to find in
me a kind of humor,
I am so vast, uncertain and strange.
I am the one who
comes and goes,
and who knows why.
Will I ever understand
him?
Certainly he will never understand me, or the world
I come
from.
For he will never sing for the kingdom of dollars.
For he will never
grow pockets in his gray wings.
~ Mary Oliver
~
(Owls and Other
Fantasies: Poems and Essays)
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