So
shy, immaterial, you lit out at night for a climate
that
knows no change, peeping to the call of winter
in
Jamaica, first-primed paradise. Now, Swainson’s
warbler,
spread your wings wide, a better treat
than
an eagle in the hands of the migrating
naturalist,
your
if-a-tree-falls-
in the
forest
rock-a-bye-ba-
by song
interrupted
by
glass. More elusive
than two
in the bush, you lay
splayed
on the chiller for twenty
empty hours.
Stroked now, how
your peppered
yellow
throat
thrills to the fall
heard
only in the mind
of the
unknown,
wholly.
Barbara Langhorst’s collection of experimental poetry, restless white fields (NeWest 2012), won the Saskatchewan Arts Board Poetry Book Award and the Robert Kroetsch Poetry Book of the Year in Alberta. Langhorst teaches at St. Peter’s College in Muenster, SK, and shares her acreage with five moose, thousands of geese, an assortment of other tame-ish animals, and her wild family. Her first novel is forthcoming with Palimpsest Press in 2018.
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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