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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Deborah Digges
Deborah Digges
Digges' poems often rely on the relationship between humans and nature, the primitive urges of discovery and rediscovery, and the physical consequences of such momentary losses of the self....
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FURTHER READING
Poems About Animals and Pets
27,000 Miles
by Albert Goldbarth
Jubilate Agno, Fragment B, [For I will consider my Cat Jeoffry]
by Christopher Smart
A List of Praises
by Anne Porter
At the Zoo
by William Makepeace Thackeray
Bats
by Paisley Rekdal
Goldfish Are Ordinary
by Stacie Cassarino
Hawk
by Daniel Waters
Ho Ho Ho Caribou
by Joseph Ceravolo
How Doth the Little Busy Bee
by Isaac Watts
Leda and the Swan
by W. B. Yeats
Mole
by Wyatt Prunty
Mother Doesn't Want a Dog
by Judith Viorst
Nelson, My Dog
by Gary Soto
Ode on the death of a favorite cat
by Thomas Gray
Psalm
by George Oppen
Skunk Hour
by Robert Lowell
The Armadillo
by Elizabeth Bishop
The Bear
by Galway Kinnell
The Caterpillar
by Robert Graves
The Crocodile
by Lewis Carroll
The Dusk of Horses
by James Dickey
The Eagle
by Lord Alfred Tennyson
The Fly
by William Blake
The Kitten and The Falling Leaves
by William Wordsworth
The Moose
by Elizabeth Bishop
The Paper Nautilus
by Marianne Moore
The Parakeets
by Alberto Blanco
The Return
by Frances Richey
The Snail
by William Cowper
The Tyger
by William Blake
The Windhover
by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Thing
by Rae Armantrout
Turn of a Year
by Joan Houlihan
Wild Gratitude
by Edward Hirsch
Wilderness
by Carl Sandburg
Poems about Birds
Tender Buttons [Chicken]
by Gertrude Stein
Littlefoot, 19, [This is the bird hour]
by Charles Wright
The Scarlet Ibis, Section VII
by Susan Hahn
A Bird came down the Walk (328)
by Emily Dickinson
Birdcall
by Alicia Suskin Ostriker
Birds Again
by Jim Harrison
Birds Appearing In A Dream
by Michael Collier
Evening Hawk
by Robert Penn Warren
Home to Roost
by Kay Ryan
Hope is the thing with feathers (254)
by Emily Dickinson
Hummingbird
by Elaine Terranova
I am Like a Desert Owl, an Owl Among the Ruins
by Noelle Kocot
If the Owl Calls Again
by John Haines
In Flight
by Jennifer K. Sweeney
Last Night I Dreamed of Chickens
by Jack Prelutsky
Leda and the Swan
by W. B. Yeats
Leda, After the Swan
by Carl Phillips
Let Birds
by Linda Gregg
My Mother Would Be a Falconress
by Robert Duncan
Ode to a Nightingale
by John Keats
Poet as Immortal Bird
by Ron Padgett
Sympathy
by Paul Laurence Dunbar
The Blue
by David Baker
The Darkling Thrush
by Thomas Hardy
The Eagle
by Lord Alfred Tennyson
The Heron
by Linda Hogan
The Parakeets
by Alberto Blanco
The Raven
by Edgar Allan Poe
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Starlings
by Jesper Svenbro
The Windhover
by Gerard Manley Hopkins
The Yellow Bittern (An Bunnan Bui)
by Cathal Bui Mac Giolla Gunna, read by James Wright
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
by Wallace Stevens
To a Skylark
by Percy Bysshe Shelley
To a Waterfowl
by William Cullen Bryant
Related Prose
Thirteen Ways of Looking: Poems About Birds
Adopt a Poet | Add to Notebook | E-mail to Friend | Print
Darwin's Finches  
by Deborah Digges

1 
My mother always called it a nest, 
the multi-colored mass harvested

from her six daughters' brushes, 
and handed it to one of us

after she had shaped it, as we sat in front 
of the fire drying our hair.

She said some birds steal anything, a strand 
of spider's web, or horse's mane,

the residue of sheep's wool in the grasses 
near a fold

where every summer of her girlhood 
hundreds nested.

Since then I've seen it for myself, their genius—
how they transform the useless.

I've seen plastics stripped and whittled 
into a brilliant straw,

and newspapers—the dates, the years—
supporting the underweavings.


2 
As tonight in our bed by the window 
you brush my hair to help me sleep, and clean

the brush as my mother did, offering 
the nest to the updraft.

I'd like to think it will be lifted as far 
as the river, and catch in some white sycamore,

or drift, too light to sink, into the shaded inlets, 
the bank-moss, where small fish, frogs, and insects

lay their eggs. 
Would this constitute an afterlife?

The story goes that sailors, moored for weeks 
off islands they called paradise,

stood in the early sunlight 
cutting their hair. And the rare

birds there, nameless, almost extinct, 
came down around them

and cleaned the decks 
and disappeared into the trees above the sea.



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From Vesper Sparrows by Deborah Digges (Antheneum, 1986). Copyright © 1986 by Deborah Digges. Reprinted with permission of the author. All rights reserved.
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