Poetry January/February 2005 Atlantic

by Maxine Kumin

The Cohort

Article Tools

email E-mail Article
print Printer Format

audioear pictureHear the author read this poem (in RealAudio)

It's true: you wake up one morning and they're gone,
the flock of a hundred redpolls who swept in like Huns
with their tiny red caps and black moustaches,
their breasts freckled and stippled like thrushes',
an irruption of redpolls you haven't seen in a decade
and may never see again in the disorderly parade
of your lifetime. How they intimidated the chickadees,
the titmice, even the needle-nosed nuthatches,
batting your year-round faithfuls away from the feeder.
How they chattered, snatching and flapping, rapacious
yet charming in their little red yarmulkes …
you shiver, remembering, refilling the cylinder.
The sunflower seeds glisten like ebony.
O merciless January, where has the cohort gone?

Maxine Kumin is the author of fourteen collections, including the recently published Jack and Other New Poems. She lives in New Hampshire.

Article Tools

email E-mail Article
Printer Format
Share

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter.

 

From Atlantic Unbound

February 6, 2002

The Art of Living

In her first poetry collection since a near-fatal accident, Maxine Kumin celebrates the forms that life and writing take.

Also By

Maxine Kumin

May 2009

Winter’s Tale

April 2007

Perspective

[with audio]


Name

Address 1

Address 2

City

State Zip

Email