Dead Man's Float by Jim Harrison. Excellent collection.
The subjects of many of these are other poets. Lorca and fellow Spaniard, Machado, make repeat visits; also Mandalstam (Russian), and Rumi (13th C., Persian).
And, as with Braided Creek (see below), many are about aging, about death, about birds. In two poems, in fact, he witnesses an unlikely sight, the moment of death of two birds, from natural causes:
Meanwhile, seventy-four years of birds
have passed. Most have died of course
so I shouldn't complain about the nearing
end of it all. I once saw a bird fall out
of a tree stone dead. I nudged it surprised
at its feather lightness that allowed it to fly.
I buried it in earth where they don't belong
any more than we do. Dead birds should be
monuments suspended forever in the air.
(from 'Seventy-four').
And here, from 'Solstice Litany'),
A very old robin drops dead
on the lawn, a first for me. Millions
of birds die but we never see it--they like
privacy in this holy, fatal moment or so
I think. We can't tell each other when we die.
Others must carry the message to and fro.
"He's gone," they'll say. While writing an average poem
destined to disappear among the millions of poems
written now by mortally average poets.
A few other notable lines:
Birds are poems I haven't caught yet.
——-
As an artist
you follow the girl in the white tennis dress
for 25,000 miles and never close the deal.
———-
Nature gets bruised, injured,
murdered in bed
———-
Some gods have been dead
a thousand years and need our magic
and music to bring them back to life.
We owe it to them. They got us started.
——-
It's up to poets to retrieve the gods.
———
From a distance the head is a bowling ball on the shoulders, but not so: a carapace and inside, the contents are what children call "gushy." The soft brain has its own improbable life containing galaxies, tens of thousands of people met, the microcosm of life in one place and on the diaphanous and often filthy cloth of memory, hanging there and battered on the clothesline in so many years of bad weather, wet and stiff with ice or blasted by sun and heat, part of it in shreds.
(From 'Round')
Other favorites: Lazuli Trance; God's Mouth; Tethered, Time Again (2); Bird Nightmares; Nuthatch Girl; Apple.
Library copy. Intend to re-read, so, for my future ref, I also very much liked pg 7,11,13, 18, 34, 37, 39, 40, 43, 49, 51, 61, 63, 70, 71, 81, 83-86, 93
I'm new to this author and will be reading more. My introduction to him was via a collaboration, Braided Creek. An excerpt from my review of that book:
Braided Creek"—300 very short poems, collected from letters exchanged over the years between poets Jim Harrison and Ted Kooser. Many are aphoristic, some are similar to haikus. Ranging from straight-forward to the enigmatic, subjects include nature, love, friendship, and of course, aging. (About a half dozen, I think, are about stopped clocks.) More than are self-deprecating, poking fun at poets. I loved this book.