Tag Archive for 'poems about animals'

Poems About Animals: Fireflies

Thinking about summer,
I am brought home to a
twilit July evening.

wisps of will floating,
tiny golden orbs dancing
in the cool soft breeze

I am with my sister, my brother
learning to catch the fires gently

do not to harm the light,
our parents say.
absorb it, and
let them fly free

Poems About Animals: A Korean Crow

I do not know what your name is,
but I will call you “crow,” for you remind me
of your cousins back home.
You catch my eye
streaks of blue and white against black,
rather than America’s squawking midnights

You seem surprised at the metropolis
that has sprung up around you.
Head tilted, you call to your friends, and fly
tree to power line, power line to tree

Sorry about missing the verse last week. I pulled my back and could barely get out of bed. All better now. Hope you like this one. Squawk.

Poems About Animals: Totem

Today I read of totem animals,
those creatures that in our youth
we saw ourselves,
and I reflected:

I am at home in northern Illinois,
in those preteen years before
wonderment gives way to the
tangled growth of adolescence.

In the late summer,
my mother is calling from the front yard.
We are one of the first families
to move this edge of town —
brick and siding standing alone.

A creek wanders in the rear,
behind Annie Glidden’s rusted wire.
Boys step through carefully, in
jean shorts and Chicago Bulls tees.

My stepfather saw a beaver there once
I did too
or, at least, I wanted to.

The sky relaxes into a gray-blue evening

Mom shouts again, “come out fast!”
Bursting from of the garage and skidding on the driveway
I make out a great horned silhouette
atop my neighbor’s roof.

In haunting grace, she stands:
Owl.

She is mystery
She is known
She is the country meeting the city

And now, I realize, so am I.

Yep, changed the name of this little weekly feature. It’s a little more simple, and simple is awesome. The superbly written inspiration for this poem can be found here on Tricycle and in the hearts and minds of Midwestern boys.