Showing posts with label Pileated Woodpecker in flight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pileated Woodpecker in flight. Show all posts

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Pileated Woodpecker in Flight (David Mintz, photographer), Sonnet #273


















They say his lost cousin, ivory-billed,
Once chopped down a sycamore and when locked
In a cabin with a bobcat, he killed
The beast with a stab, flinging splinters, knocked
A hole in the door and flew. Man, he mocked.
I don't believe his laughter is extinct.
The pileated's eternal drumming
Is always distant, like tiny thunder.
He's flown right over me. I flinched. I blinked.
His loping flight, black and white wings strumming
The forest light, is the end of wonder.
Here he's caught, head turned around and under,
Flying, crest upside down -- impossible.
Yet, a thing of feathers, flesh, blood, and bill.