The Kestrel Blues by Marjorie Gowdy

Photo of falcon in the air
Photo by Bob Brewer on Unsplash.com.

 

He perches      boldly
on the old phone wire
down Canning Factory Road.

He sings      killy killy killy
a violent tune for a falcon
painted in colbalt and rust.

Sir Toby once disparaged the staniel
as an inferior sparrowhawk. Yet here,
head down, the wind-hover enchants his prey.

Voles scamper into the marsh grass.
Young hares cower.
I admire his beauty, murder be damned.


Marjorie Gowdy
Marjorie Gowdy writes and paints on her farm at the foot of Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains. Over a long career, she has written essays, poems, short stories, and is working on a historical novel. She has had three chapbooks of poetry published, and her poems and illustrations may be found in a number of regional journals including Streetlight (Fall 2022), Artemis, Clinch River Review, and the Journal of the Virginia Writers Project.

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