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The Owl

I saw my world again through your eyes

As I would see it again through your children's eyes.

Through your eyes it was foreign.

Plain hedge hawthorns were peculiar aliens,

A mystery of peculiar lore and doings.

Anything wild, on legs, in your eyes

Emerged at a point of exclamation

As if it had appeared to dinner guests

In the middle of the table. Common mallards

Were artefacts of some unearthliness,

Their wooings were a hypnagogic film

Unreeled by the river. Impossible

To comprehend the comfort of their feet

In the freezing water. You were a camera

Recording reflections you could not fathom.

I made my world perform its utmost for you.

You took it all in with an incredulous joy

Like a mother handed her new baby

By the midwife. Your frenzy made me giddy.

It woke up my dumb, ecstatic boyhood

Of fifteen years before. My masterpiece

Came that black night on the Grantchester road.

I ****** the throaty thin woe of a rabbit

Out of my wetted knuckle, by a copse

Where a tawny owl was enquiring.

Suddenly it swooped up, splaying its pinions

Into my face, taking me for a post.

Written by
Ted Hughes
1930-1998 / Male / English
Lines·Words
27·195
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