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Eared grebes

Poem

This poem won second place in the BYU Studies 2014 poetry contest.


You were the one told me, though you called them ducks, Of the eared grebes, fifteen hundred of them, Found stunned and dying on the solid ground They thought was water. You saw their bodies, Heaped like feather pillows, in your sleep. The sky, you said, was what confused them— Something about the clouds, the storm-light— That, and their own certainty as they hurtled Toward what they thought was only temporary Rest. Next time we stand under the sky, Hands linked, marveling at the synchronicity Of flight, you will remind me that it doesn’t always End well, that breathtaking consensus. And I will Say, the way I always say, that miracles are rooted In the trivial, that there is always risk in plunging Toward the unseen, that after those birds fell They were carried, one by one and trembling, To the real water by a hundred clumsy human hands.

About the Author

issue cover
BYU Studies 53:3
ISSN 2837-004x (Online)
ISSN 2837-0031 (Print)