
|
M A Y 1 9 9 9 WOODCOCKby Erica Funkhouser | |||||||||||||
|
(For help, see a note about the audio.) Also by Erica Funkhouser: To the Animal in the Hole (1999) India Cotton Shirt (1996) The Accident (1995) Owl Pellet (1992) Go to: An Audible Anthology Poetry Pages |
If you must possess something, own it as she does her scrubby acre, her seasonal work, the nomad's habit of messing up the grass until it looks like a careless footstep and calling the fuss a nest before laying two spotted eggs upon which to fix a native vigilance. Claim it as she claims these impatient evenings of early spring, many footsteps in the weeds. Try to acquire something of her reckless voice, the bright tines of the repeated bleeps as she declares the precise coordinates of all she wishes to conceal. If necessary, take to the air in ever more eccentric circles, as her mate does, his nosedive the last thing visible before dark. And when you move on, after the chicks have mastered their own cryptic coloring, migrate defiantly. Be glad to be done with this quarried-to-death terrain. Erica Funkhouser teaches a poetry-writing workshop at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is the author of Sure Shot and Other Poems (1992) and The Actual World (1997). Copyright © 1999 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; May 1999; Woodcock; Volume 283, No. 5; page 68. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||