Favorite Poems

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              Hurt Hawks

  

 

1

The broken pillar of the wing jags from the clotted shoulder,

The wing trails like a banner in defeat,

No more to use the sky forever but live with famine

And pain a few days:  cat nor coyote

Will shorten the week of waiting for death, there is game without talons.

He stands under the oak-brush and waits

The lame feet of salvation;  at night he remembers freedom

And flies in a dream, the dawns ruin it.

He is strong and pain is worse to the strong, incapacity is worse.

The curs of the day come and torment him

At distance, no one but death the redeemer will humble that head,

The intrepid readiness, the terrible eyes.

The wild God of the world is sometimes merciful to those

That ask mercy, not often to the arrogant.

You do not know him, you communal people, or you have forgotten him;

Intemperate and savage, the hawk remembers him;

Beautiful and wild, the hawks, and men that are dying, remember him.

 

2

I'd sooner, except the penalties, kill a man than a hawk; but
the great redtail

Had nothing left but unable misery

From the bone too shattered for mending, the wing that trailed under
his talons when he moved.

We had fed him six weeks, I gave him freedom,

He wandered over the foreland hill and returned in the evening,
asking for death,

Not like a beggar, still eyed with the old

Implacable arrogance.  I gave him the lead gift in the twilight.  What
fell was relaxed,

Owl-downy, soft feminine feathers; but what

Soared: the fierce rush: the night-herons by the flooded river cried
fear at its rising

Before it was quite unsheathed from reality.

 

                                                       Robinson Jeffers

                                                       1928

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