(Poem #41)For the Man Who Taught Tricks to Owls You say they were slow to learn. The brains of owls Went down in your opinion through long hours Of unresponsive staring While you showed them how to act out minor parts In the world of Harry Potter. Come with me now Into the night, perch motionless, balanced On a branch above a thicket, where every choice Of a flight path is more narrow Than your broad wing-span, more jagged And crooked than patterns of interrupted moonlight On twigs and fallen leaves, where what you take In silence with claws and beak to stay alive Knows everything about you except your tricks, Except where you're going to be in the next instant And how you got there without anyone's help |