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On Hearing the Golden-crowned Sparrow
Brenda Hillman
Half-sweet squeal.
sounds like one hearing aid placed on the table . . .

A song knows
more than one way.

When hills catch fire,
this sparrow stays
(or, returns
to the same busheach year—)

We loved each other
when we couldn't love ourselves,

our life a time-shaped miracle.

A new ash is covering the plants, 

planet . . .plans::

the song's enchantment has a grainy hunger,

finishingly, seep-seep, nightly
finishing unearthbound, like a Saturday.
Its broad eyebrows crowd its crown.

When we are sad about poetry,
when the immortals can't
be heard because of fire

this staggered sound Split
splendor (about

our height, from the ground—)
from the book IN A FEW MINUTES BEFORE LATER / Wesleyan University Press
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The golden-crowned sparrows have been present outside our kitchen throughout the pandemic. Their songs have been so sweet. This is also a sort of eco-poem because the pleasure is undercut by the anxiety about wildfire. There are often interwoven impulses of poetic tradition in my poems, not isolated threads. Like the golden-crowned sparrow, my husband also has thick eyebrows.

Brenda Hillman on "On Hearing the Golden-crowned Sparrow"
Color headshot of a smiling A. E. Stallings
"Short Conversations with Poets: A. E. Stallings"

"I love thinking about diction: sound, vowel-music, syllable-count, etymology, register. I’m always particularly pleased when I get a word in a poem that is unexpected, that I haven’t used in a poem before, or that is rubbing shoulders with words it wouldn’t usually hang out with. I suppose the king of that is really John Ashbery. But I don’t want the word to stick out like a sore thumb, either, I want it to be the natural and precise word, but surprising because it is in a poem."

via MCSWEENEY'S
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Color image from the Favorite Poetry Project
What Sparks Poetry:
Robert Pinsky on the Favorite Poem Project


"I think of Emiko Emori’s video of a Cambodian-American high school student reading 'Minstrel Man' by Langston Hughes, David Roderick’s video of a bomber pilot who served in Vietnam reading Yusef Komunyakaa’s 'Facing It' at the Vietnam Memorial, Natatcha Estébanez’s videos of a U.S. Marine reading 'Politics' by William Butler Yeats, and of a construction worker reading from Walt Whitman’s 'Song of Myself.'"
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