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The great horned owl, the naturalist told us, has senses so wonderful it can hear our hearts beating in our chests, the rush of blood through our open arteries. That's how, she said, it hunts its prey, tiny mice hiding beneath the snow. Discerning their tremulous pulses, it bears down on them like doom from the pine branch, reptile talons outstretched upon faceless snow. Does the mouse’s pulse, I wondered, quicken as the owl’s Valkyrie wings descend? For one—me—unhunted by the raptor there is a longing to be heard to bare one’s chest to the aching ears of the bird to beat the worried rhythm of my soul to this listener, hoping vaguely for reply or for succor. Why this desire for this secret discourse, this singing one to the other, beating heart to bending ear? We move, each day, among throngs of us, crowds of us, bumping, passing, every soul beating its peculiar drumbeat, every street a percussive chaos— joyous crescendos, dirges, incantations— yet we are as silent to one another as the timpani of the ninth to its feverish creator. This bird sits within its wood and wire enclosure hissing at the passerby, irritated to be awake, pine-cone shaped but for its feather “ears,” absurdly lopsided on its swiveling head. Still, it listens and looks with a knowingness that makes me linger hopefully by the cage-side. For this infinite moment, I will whisper to the interested, will pause discreetly for the owl to look in my direction and, with no more than a show of its black, impassive pupils, hear me.
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Aug 21, 2017
Aug 21, 2017 at 1:54 PM UTC
The Owl
The great horned owl, the naturalist told us, has senses so wonderful it can hear our hearts beating in our chests, the rush of blood through our open arteries. That's how, she said, it hunts its prey, tiny mice hiding beneath the snow. Discerning their tremulous pulses, it bears down on them like doom from the pine branch, reptile talons outstretched upon faceless snow. Does the mouse’s pulse, I wondered, quicken as the owl’s Valkyrie wings descend? For one—me—unhunted by the raptor there is a longing to be heard to bare one’s chest to the aching ears of the bird to beat the worried rhythm of my soul to this listener, hoping vaguely for reply or for succor. Why this desire for this secret discourse, this singing one to the other, beating heart to bending ear? We move, each day, among throngs of us, crowds of us, bumping, passing, every soul beating its peculiar drumbeat, every street a percussive chaos— joyous crescendos, dirges, incantations— yet we are as silent to one another as the timpani of the ninth to its feverish creator. This bird sits within its wood and wire enclosure hissing at the passerby, irritated to be awake, pine-cone shaped but for its feather “ears,” absurdly lopsided on its swiveling head. Still, it listens and looks with a knowingness that makes me linger hopefully by the cage-side. For this infinite moment, I will whisper to the interested, will pause discreetly for the owl to look in my direction and, with no more than a show of its black, impassive pupils, hear me.
jim-hillyt
Written by
Saratoga Springs, NY
Aug 21, 2017
Aug 21, 2017 at 1:54 PM UTC
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