Nature Poem
When
a Gunnison's [prairie dog] sees a
person
and gives
an alarm, it doesn't simply
say,
"Predator!" It actually
says, for example,
"Tall dark thin
man!" With humans,
they will
scurry into their burrows, then pop their
heads
back out to watch.
The
Baltimore Sun
For
so long nature never said a word.
Whenever
storms harangued or seas would rage,
Whenever
thrush or skylark would be heard
To
warn, or trees to whisper in the winds,
We
knew that we were standing just offstage,
Throwing
our voices, speaking their many minds.
But
if they could speak, we had speculated,
They'd
love us, care for us, or be profound
At
least in their uncaring; so we waited,
Leaving
them speechless even as we sought
To
speak some sentence into every sound.
That
was the nature of the world we thought.
Now
we have intercepted on the prairie
Gunnison's
sentries calling to the clan,
And
finally cracked the code: "Sh!
Be wary!
Go
to your homes.
Tall
dark thin man
This
way comes."
Greg Williamson
From
The Silent Partner, Story Line Press,
©
1994. Reprinted by permission of the author
and Story Line
Press, Ashland, Oregon. |