I've been in a blue funk since November 9, without hope of breaking through. So, for this holiday Poetry Friday I've decided to post something from a poet who is not me! Yes, indeed, there are Christmas miracles.
I wrote about Robert Francis back
in October and shared two of his bird poems. Since that time, I've borrowed several other small volumes of the work of this New England poet.
Illustration from A Year with the Birds (1917) by Alice Eliza Ball and R. Bruce Horsfall (1917).
Here is another bird poem, from
The Orb Weaver: Poems (1960), which is particularly relevant at this time of year:
The Seed Eaters
The seed eaters, the vegetarian birds,
Redpolls, grosbeaks, crossbills, finches, siskins,
Fly south to winter in our north, so making
A sort of Florida of our best blizzards.
Weed seed and seeds of pine cones are their pillage,
Alder and birch catkins, such vegetable
Odds and ends as the winged keys of maple
As well as roadside sumac, red-plus-seeded.
Hi! with a bounce in snowflake flocks come juncos
As if a hand had flipped them and tree sparrows,
Now nip and tuck and playing tag, now squatting
All weather-proofed and feather-fluffed on snow.
Hard fare, full feast, I'll say, deep cold, high spirits.
Here's Christmas to Candlemas on a bunting's budget.
From this old seed eater with his beans, his soybeans,
Cracked corn, cracked wheat, peanuts and split peas, hail!
And from a volume titled
The Satirical Rogue on Poetry (1968) comes this little holiday gift:
The Well-made Poem
Spare me, please, the man who speaks, whether
disparagingly or approvingly, of the well-made poem.
Has he never read or heard that poems are not made
but grow--like snowflakes, like flowers, like seashells?
Has he never perceived that a true poem--like a rose,
like a goddess, like a diamond--is not made but born?
Fly over to
Buffy's Blog for this week's Poetry Friday Round-Up! Happy holidays!