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Kate Richter Feb 2013
Our father liked to play a game.
He would count each hawk
preying, circling above veiny tree lines
graying like shadows of industry.

There’s a redtail, he would say, look
at its proud chest and talons of mastery. Our
eyes searched for the creature, noses
pressed to cool glass and 65MPH speed.

Sometimes we’d catch the bird with two eyes, one eye
or none. Meanwhile, our father never took his eyes
off the road, fixed on painted yellow lines stretching
to heartlands down New York’s I-90 West.

With age my eyes became engaged, detecting
the slightest movement peripherally. Rods
in retinas distinguished plump plumes from leaflet
tufts, razor beaks from thorny stags, white breast from

billowing plastic bags. My sideways scan
of leafy fringe is an artifact of habit
when traveling down state roads of this infra-structured
nation. I search for evidence of its natural relation,

beyond all that is manufactured by the jelly-
spine of convenience, beyond wheels spinning
at deafening speed, beyond the grubby hands of greed.
Still, our connection to place is still here and Earthly,

coexisting in delicacy, like the hawk’s nested-blend
of twig and trash. I trust there is a chance for us yet,
despite cloudy puddles of progress, despite integrity
lost in capital gain, despite a forgotten native name.
Perig3e Feb 2011
Redtail hawk, pigeon,
raptor, prey, blood spill, city walk,
pigeon flew away!
All rights reserved by the author
Stu Harley Nov 2020
way up yonder
them
redtail driftwoods
spinning
around and around
like a **** tornado
rapped inside of
a dust devil
just hang on
just
a little bit longer
Onoma Nov 2019
caught my beloved bird

preying, red tail hawk.

the rich olive green

underbelly of the Whitestone

Bridge offered up a glimpse

of a twofer.

redtail with a pigeon in toe--

a solitary feather whirled down

from the appreciably wide

crossbeam.

no more feathers fell down--

only that redtail going in.

watching it dip up and down ,

somewhere along the line

learning to dismember its prey

within that obscuring crossbeam.

from other birds of prey.
Stu Harley Sep 2018
the
redtail hawk
have eyes
the
color of
cold blue Remington steel
thus
her eyes
pierce
through
the
soul
to
catch her prey
Devon Brock Aug 2019
Driving to the lone tree,
the one that marks the right left turn,
the tree full and round,
uncluttered by the muttering
tangling limbs of crowd oak
jostling pine and mobbing
silver maple that snap the wind
into fingers and clenched fists
of hale big as jawbreakers.

That's where the twist lives,
just past the stump yard
trying to petrify, turning
wood to stone,
before the rot hits home,
before nobody knows
where to turn no more.

We found our way
once the willow went down
but it took some time
took some time til
we saw that the redtail
always dives into the same deep
culvert where asparagus
is marked with upturned
boots that never fit anyway

We all find our own way home
the blind Rand McNally instinct
of Get 'n Go coffee stained maps
splitting at the folds.

It takes some time
but we always find a sign
a whitetail spine
or a naked brown christmas tree
or a sag bottom Bud box
thrown, that leads us through the
nameless roads home.
Stu Harley Aug 2015
the
redtail hawk
reached
her
highest point
through
wings of faith
when
latched
upon
the
pilgrim blue sky
Stu Harley Dec 2014
a redtail hawk
master of flight
cannonball
through
thick white
indian clouds
pitch and roll
through
a field of gold
with delight
Stu Harley Jan 2017
a stiff wind
upon
the
climb of
the
redtail hawk
and
it
catapult
through
the
deep blue
blueberry sky
SøułSurvivør Nov 2019
A Redtail Hawk
Perches the high tree
A barren branch
So she can see
I wonder what
She thinks of me...
Does she know
I'm also free?

She lets loose cries
So sharp & clear
She has no
Melody to hear
Just urgent need
For meat to tear
She has young
To feed & rear.

She's not prone
To ponder. Think.
She acts upon
Pure instinct
To swoop down
Upon her prey
So her young
Will eat today.

Human beings are
Burdened. Bound.
We are tethered
To the ground
Though flight machines
Are built... abound
We still have to
Fly in steel
To the hawk
There's no appeal.

We won't spread
Our wings & fly
From the earth
We view the sky
On this earth
For now we'll be
Only hawks
Perch in high trees.
Stu Harley Oct 2016
redtail hawk
with
sovereign wings
undeniable
joy
through
thick clouds
and
strong winds
while
cloud dancing
again
Stu Harley Sep 2018
with
springs
attach
to
their hooves
redtail gazelles
dash bounce skip hop
as
high as
the
pink cotton candy clouds
through
the
drumbeat sky
Stu Harley Mar 31
Love walked out in the clearing, bathed in morning's gleam,
No harsh words were spoken, just a silent, fading dream.
A path once well-trodden, now overgrown with weeds,
Memories linger, like wildflowers, where passion once feeds.

Did the sunrise too quickly, or did the chill settle in?
Did whispers turn distant, a love growing thin?
Perhaps a shared silence spoke volumes untold,
A story unfinished, left out in the cold.

The clearing stands empty, a canvas so bare,
Aching with absence, a love beyond repair.
But nature persists, with the strength to renew,
Love may walk onward, but new blooms wait for you.
Then, I spotted a redtail deer

— The End —