Tag: cuckoo and pippit poem

  • Cuckoo

    Cuckoo

    I fall to Wales
    between barred clouds and slate sea,

    trailing a long day like a banner.
    Coucou, I say, I am from Kinshasa 

    Cwcw, they say.
    Soft rain rills desert dust from my wings.

    I am not a migrant;
    this is my second home.

    I fathom the woods for dunnocks.
    Zulus call me unokukhukhuza.

    My eye is a universe.
    I quarter the meadows for pipits.

    My eggs hatch their terror like slow bombs.
    More! they megaphone.

    More! is not enough –
    they might swallow their parents whole.  

    They follow white thread stitching black roads to the coast.
    Their hearts’ compasses beat them south:

    Africa Africa Africa.
    The sun scags at their backs like a hawk.

    Forests applaud their arrival.
    Warm rain brooks Wales from their feathers. 

    Cwcw, they say.
    Coucou, I say.

    Feature Image: A chick of the common cuckoo in the nest of a tree pipit