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FURTHER READING
Poems About Animals and Pets
27,000 Miles
by Albert Goldbarth
At the Zoo
by William Makepeace Thackeray
Darwin's Finches
by Deborah Digges
Evening Hawk
by Robert Penn Warren
from Jubilate Agno, Fragment B, lines 695-768
by Christopher Smart
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
Skunk Hour
by Robert Lowell
The Armadillo
by Elizabeth Bishop
The Bear
by Galway Kinnell
The Crocodile
by Lewis Carroll
The Eagle
by Lord Alfred Tennyson
The Kitten and The Falling Leaves
by William Wordsworth
The Moose
by Elizabeth Bishop
The Paper Nautilus
by Marianne Moore
The Return
by Frances Richey
The Tyger
by William Blake
Thing
by Rae Armantrout
Turn of a Year
by Joan Houlihan
Poems for Halloween
Darkness
by George Gordon Byron
Dirge
by Thomas Lovell Beddoes
From The Lady of the Manor
by George Crabbe
Goblin Market
by Christina Rossetti
Halloween
by Robert Burns
Haunted Houses
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Raising the Devil: A Legend of Cornelius Agrippa
by Richard Harris Barham
Shadwell Stair
by Wilfred Owen
Sonnet 100
by Lord Brooke Fulke Greville
Spirits of the Dead
by Edgar Allan Poe
The Hag
by Robert Herrick
The Hand of Glory: The Nurse's Story
by Richard Harris Barham
The Haunted Palace
by Edgar Allan Poe
The Raven
by Edgar Allan Poe
The White Witch
by James Weldon Johnson
Third Charm from Masque of Queens
by Ben Jonson
Three Witches from Macbeth
by William Shakespeare
Ulalume
by Edgar Allan Poe
Related Prose
Poems for Animals and Pets
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Bats  
by Paisley Rekdal

unveil themselves in dark.
They hang, each a jagged,

silken sleeve, from moonlit rafters bright
as polished knives. They swim

the muddled air and keen
like supersonic babies, the sound

we imagine empty wombs might make
in women who can’t fill them up.

A clasp, a scratch, a sigh.
They drink fruit dry.

And wheel, against feverish light flung hard
upon their faces,

in circles that nauseate.
Imagine one at breast or neck,

Patterning a name in driblets of iodine
that spatter your skin stars.

They flutter, shake like mystics.
They materialize. Revelatory

as a stranger’s underthings found tossed
upon the marital bed, you tremble

even at the thought. Asleep,
you tear your fingers

and search the sheets all night.



From The Invention of the Kaleidoscope by Paisley Rekdal, © 2007. Reprinted by permission of the University of Pittsburgh Press.
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