The Drumming of the Woodpecker
September 23, 2015Photo courtesy Joan Greenman |
Introduction by Ted Kooser: In this fascinating poem by the California poet, Jane Hirshfield, the speaker discovers that through paying attention to an event she has become part of it, has indeed become inseparable from the event and its implications. This is more than an act of empathy. It speaks, in my reading of it, to the perception of an order into which all creatures and events are fitted, and are essential.
The Woodpecker Keeps Returning
The woodpecker keeps returning
to drill the house wall.
Put a pie plate over one place, he chooses another.
There is nothing good to eat there:
he has found in the
house
a resonant billboard to post his intentions,
his voluble strength as provider.
But where is the female he drums for? Where?
I ask this, who am myself the ruined siding,
the handsome red-capped bird, the missing mate.
Poem copyright © 2005 by Jane Hirshfield from her
forthcoming book “After” (Harper Collins, 2006), and reprinted by permission of
the author. This weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library
of Congress and the Department of English at the University of Nebraska,
Lincoln. American Life in Poetry ©2005 The Poetry Foundation Contact:
alp@poetryfoundation.org This column does not accept unsolicited poetry.
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