(Inspired by Wallace Stevens's poem 'Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird', which is one of my favorites.)
Ⅰ
Among the deathly pale hills
suffocating in their blanket of snow,
the only thing moving was the wing of the goldfinch.
Ⅱ
My mind was always pulling,
tearing itself apart to ride down three different roads,
and on each path was a goldfinch.
Ⅲ
The goldfinch soared in the autumn sky,
the winds no match for its clever eye.
Ⅳ
Humankind and nature
are one.
Humankind and nature and the goldfinch
are one.
Ⅴ
The view from the top of the mountain
wowed me, and widened my eyes.
The goldfinch’s whistle
stole my breath away.
Ⅵ
The trees are naked now,
trying to hide their unfashionably empty branches,
gray against the blindingly white snow.
One has no need.
It is the tree where the goldfinch rests.
Ⅶ
Oh, great rabbis and scholars
of the villages and temples of old,
why do you speak of jeweled birds?
You have no need for ruby-adorned mechanical things,
for the goldfinch walks at your feet.
Ⅷ
I know of stories, of songs,
of shoes and ships and sealing wax, of cabbages and kings.
Yet I know, too,
that the goldfinch is involved in what I know.
Ⅸ
When the goldfinch
Flies out of sight
I am compelled by a sudden urge
To follow its golden wings to the ends of the earth.
Ⅹ
When in sight
Of goldfinches flying in the evening light,
Even the heartless, the unfeeling
Would cry out in awe.
Ⅺ
He rode around Vermont
On a chestnut horse, with unsightly yellow reins.
Suddenly, a fear overtook him:
He mistook the limp little reins
For a goldfinch.
Ⅻ
The earth is turning,
and the river is moving.
The goldfinch will be flying.
ⅫⅠ
It was winter, again.
It had been snowing;
It was going to snow, again.
The goldfinch sat
In the cedar limbs.
Comments
Did anyone get my Alice in Wonderland joking line in the eighth stanza??
I did, I laughed out loud!
"Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Goldfinch" is this week's featured poem on vtdigger.org, up now in their Life & Culture section. Check it out here, where a new piece is posted every Sunday! vtdigger.org/life-culture
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