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April 26, 2004

"Unclean," Brooks Haxton

by Ron Hogan

The pelican in scripture is unclean. It pukes dead fish
onto the hatchlings, and it roosts alone, like Satan
on the Tree of Life. Nobody told me. I liked pelicans.
I liked owls, too. I used to lie awake and listen,
wanting to become an owl, to fly, to see through darkness,
turn my head and look straight back bbehind me. I was
happy, as kids go, but I did not belong in human form.
Sparrows peck grain from fresh dung. In this world rich
means filthy. Leopardi, in his high Romantic musings
on the sparrow, does not say the poet is a shitbird, just
that, singing by himself, he acts like one, and wishes
he could feel more like one, unashamed to do so. here,
the preacher (burning in his bones with fever, puking
half-digested fish, and hooting, sleepless in the ruins
like the baleful dead) cries: O Lord, take me not away.

From Uproar: Antiphones to Psalms.

Haxton is equally acclaimed as translator and poet; I'm particularly fond of his work on the Penguin Classics Heraclitus. In 1998 he translated several Greek poets for The Atlantic. Read his poem "All the Immortals Ever Think About Is Sex."

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