Essay - Hayden Carruth

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 5 ก.พ. 2025
  • A sad and poem by Carruth.
    Essay
    So many poems about the deaths of animals.
    Wilbur’s toad, Kinnell’s porcupine, Eberhart’s squirrel,
    and that poem by someone-Hecht? Merrill?-
    about cremating a woodchuck. But mostly
    I remember the outrageous number of them,
    as if every poet, I too, had written at least
    one animal elegy; with the result that today
    when I came to a good enough poem by Edwin Brock
    about finding a dead fox at the edge of the sea
    I could not respond; as if permanent shock
    had deadened me. And then after a moment
    I began to give way to sorrow (watching myself
    sorrowlessly the while), not merely because
    part of my being had been violated and annulled,
    but because all these many poems over the years
    have been necessary-suitable and correct. This
    has been the time of the finishing off of the animals.
    They are going away-their fur and their wild eyes,
    their voices. Deer leap and leap in front
    of the screaming snowmobiles until they leap
    out of existence. Hawks circle once or twice
    around their shattered nests and then they climb
    to the stars. I have lived with them fifty years,
    we have lived with them fifty million years,
    and now they are going, almost gone. I don’t know
    if the animals are capable of reproach.
    But clearly they do not bother to say good-bye.
    - Hayden Carruth

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