What The Robin Knows by Jon Young
By onemorething
- 814 reads
The robin knows the earth and worm,
examines, head tilted, the advance
of moss across my garden wall -
a cushion for speckled eggs
in Spring, but for now, he will sing
us through the dearth of winter,
his fences built from music and
alarm calls of rapid tick-ticks.
Here, he shows the ruby anger
of his breast, the blood
of trespassers, the timber
of his heart. The robin knows
to bring water to extinguish
a flame, to bear his own light
in the darkness of a storm;
he will mourn an old year, but
his liquid song flows into the new.
The robin knows to stay and when
to follow the marks of cattle
that have broken the frost,
and whilst he is the flight
of my thoughts - he is never lost -
he is tied to magnetic fields,
entangled in the physics
of quantum mechanics
that flicker behind his black eye:
all these things he comprehends,
but I do not think
the robin knows it's Christmas.
Image is my own of the book 'What The Robin Knows' - it's a brilliant book, but don't buy it as a book about robins if it interests you as almost none of this poem is based on the book's information - the book, despite the title, is about all birds, not just the robin. It just made me want to write a poem about robins, especially at this time of year.
If you would like a little joy in your heart, here is a robin singing: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Nrw9xPCFtYw
And their alarm call: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MVD7dtXRdQo
Image on Twitter: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Erithacus_rubecula_1869.jpg
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Interesting poem Rachel. It
Interesting poem Rachel. It always amazes me just how clever the robin is, it's as if they have a sixth sense, and although very terroitorial, they seem to have a special bond with humans, especially when they know you're gardening and digging the worms up, they show no fear at all.
I like the idea of them singing us through the dearth of winter. You're right, robin is never lost, I think all birds are tied to magnetic fields, they comprehend so much more than we do.
great poem Rachel.
Hope my comment came over okay.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
The last line made me laugh.
The last line made me laugh. I was plagued by a robin during the writing of Flamingo Hotel by a robin. It used to come and tap on the kitchen door. I would scare it away, scare it away. Then it would go to the front door. Tap there.
The book's done.
It's gone now.
- Log in to post comments