Potential Titles: Birds [category]
Aug. 2nd, 2012 08:51 pmAlbatross.
Avian:
Prayed to avian gods we don't believe in - Keith Taylor "Acolytes in the Bird-While"
Bantam:
And raised a mighty bantam crow - Grace Greenwood "Babie Annie to Cousin J--, acknowledging the Christmas-gift of a chain"
Barn Swallow:
The barn swallows' sharp flight and cry - Diane Seuss "Six Unrhymed Sonnets"
Bird.
Bittern:
Take a string to a bittern's back - Katie Ford "The Throats of Guantanamo"
Heard the bitterns call from ruined palace-wall - Robert Graves "In the Wilderness"
As curlew, hern, and bittern pass - Emily Lawless "The Inalienable Heritage"
The brown bittern speaks in the bog - "A Sleep Song" transl. by P.H. Pearse
Blackbird.
Bluebird.
Bluejay.
Bobolink:
A town full of busy bobolinks - Amber aka Martha Everts Holden "A Little Goldenhead"
A bobolink left the bloom of a tree - Amber aka Martha Everts Holden "The Story of a Rose"
Nor the bobolink's trill the less laughs - Kate Putnam "Excuse" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.4, August 1864]
Bulfinch:
The bulfinch marks me stealing by - C.S. Calverley "Sad Memories"
Buzzard.
Cactus Wren:
the cactus wren finished the lightning - Jake Skeets "Sonoran Desert Poem"
Canadian Geese:Mysteriously enlisted in a V formation of Canadian geese - Duane Ackerson "Three Urban Legends"
Canary:
The blue canary of my country - Ilya Kaminsky "4 a.m. Bombardment"
I would sing as the canary passes - Rickey Laurentiis "Because we love each other"
Canvasback Duck:
Canvasback ducks dodging coyotes - Keith Taylor "The Road from Galahad"
Cardinal:
The flash of cardinal in the reeds - Chelsea B. DesAutels "Annual Migration"
The burden of the cardinal virtues - Ellen Hinsey "Epistle"
Cardinals flying straight up - Diane Mehta "Ode to Patrick Kearns, Funeral Director of the Leo F. Kearns Funeral Home, in Queens"
Chaffinch:
Laugh at chaffinch and at primroses - Robert Graves "Not Dead"
Chickadee.
Chicken.
Cock:
Woe to the cock who strutteth on ice - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry CXV: Woes" transl. by J.W. Wiles
The cock desired the heron's flight - John Gay "Fable IV: Jove's Eagle, and Murmuring Beasts" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]
With a phantom's cockcrow smile - Aldous Huxley "Mole"
Braver notes the storm-cock sings - A.E. Housman "A Shropshire Lad X: March"
Cockatoo:
The green freedom of a cockatoo - Wallace Stevens "Sunday Morning"
Condor.
Cormorant.
Corncrake:
Call of the corncrake, cuckoo, or crane - credited to an emigrant named MacAmbrois "The Exile's Song" transl. by Eleanor Hull
Crane.
Crow.
Crying-Bird:
Disturb'd by the crane's and the crying-bird's screams - F.B.C. "The Quadrupeds' Pic-Nic"
Cuckoo.
Curlew.
Dodo:
The dwelling place for other dodos - Monica de la Torre "View from a Dodo Chair"
As famous as the pterodactyl or the dodo - Alison Hawthorne Deming "Science"
The demise of the dodo - Mary Soon Lee "I, Universe"
Dove.
Drake:
Where the wood drake rests in his beauty - Wendell Berry "The Peace of Wild Things"
Duck.
Eagle.
Egret.
Emu:
A lullaby of ostriches and emus - Deborah Ruddell "Penguin's Lullaby"
Falcon.
Field Sparrow:
One field sparrow song down-falling - Janet Kauffman "Air Here"
Finch.
Firebird:
The storm that douse the firebird - R.B. Lemberg "Firebird, Stormbird"
Fish-Hawk:
Takes from the fish-hawk his newly caught prey - F.B.C. "The Quadrupeds' Pic-Nic"
Flamingo.
Fledge/Fledgling.
Flicker:
First flicker drumming on a dead ash - Keith Taylor "Marginalia for a Natural History"
Fowl.
Gander:
These moonmad swans and ecstatic ganders - Lawrence Ferlinghetti "A Coney Island of the Mind, 11"
And all the ganders flee - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 35: The Pangs and Politics of Love" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
Gannet:
As gannets when the fish are due - John Masefield "The 'Wanderer'"
Geese/Goose.
Goldfinch.
Gosling:
The happy clatter of little goslings - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 225: The Poet's Petition and Praise" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
When every little gosling sings - A.D.T. Whitney "Brahmic"
Grackle:
Sends the grackles into cedars - Frank Stanford "The Solitude of Historical Analysis"
Gray Owl:
Only the frogs and the gray owl know - Don Marquis "In the Bayou"
Great Blue Heron:
Rested in the dignity of the Great Blue Heron - Major Jackson "Song as Abridge Thesis of George Perkins Marsh's Man and Nature"
Great Horned Owl:
Awakened by a great horned owl - Alison Swan "Before the Snow Moon"
Great horned owls have not returned to the heron rookery - Keith Taylor "In Memory: Dan Minock"
Gull/Seagull.
Hawk.
Hen.
Heron.
Honey-Bird:
The honey-birds pipe to the budding figs - Sarojini Naidu "Spring"
Hoot Owl:
A hoot owl called to the moon - Yusef Komunyakaa "Ota Benga at Edenkraal"
House Finch:
House finch weaving its song - Terry Blackhawk "Maumee, Maumee"
Hummingbird.
Ibis:
The Ibis yet returns - Duncan Anderson "Sport"
Stitched by hungry ibises - Campbell McGrath "The Everglades"
Jackdaw:
My jackdaw Muse of the rebel and dark - Stephen Vincent Benet "November Prothalamion"
The jackdaw's noisy company - Giosue Carducci "On My Daughter's Marriage" transl. by Frank Sewall
The chattering jackdaw builds - Alfred Noyes "Darwin III: The Testimony of the Rocks"
Jay.
Junco:
Jays and juncos rallied to see - Bruce Ducker "Picnic"
Dark capped juncos hidden in dense foliage - Philip Levine "For the Country: The Garden"
Kestrel:
Blowing the poising kestrel over - John Masefield "On Malvern Hill"
Kingbird:
As kingfishers catch fire - Gerard Manley Hopkins "As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame"
The kingbird and the pensive thrush are fled - Archibald Lampman "September"
Kingfisher.
Kite.
Lapwing:
Where lapwings float at rest - Herbert Randall "The Angelus of Plymouth Woods"
Through startled lapwings now we run - Mary Webb "Market Day"
Encumbered with the shriek of lapwings - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver
Lark.
Linnet.
Loon.
Lyrebird:
Lyrebird speaking stolen words - Amari Low "Themself"
Macaw:
A fierce macaw on the verandah - Edward Dowden "In the Garden"
Magpie.
Mallard:
Mallards carved in oily silken water - Daisy Aldan "The Bay"
Meadowlark:
Meadow-lark no less than nightingale - James Whitcombe Riley "Three Singing Friends"
Missel-Thrush:
Sweet sings the missel-thrush amid the crash - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.IX--Autumn, in its First Aspect"
Mockingbird.
Moor-Fowl:
Sorrow in the cries of moor-fowls - Winfield Shiras "Sonnet"
Moor-Hen:
The moor-hen stepping from her reeds - Charlotte Mew "On the Asylum Road"
Night-Hawk:
Dream upon the night-hawks peopling heaven - Robert Frost "Waiting-- Afield at Dusk"
Night-Owl:
The little night-owl make her throne - Oscar Wilde "The Grave of Shelley"
Nightingale.
Nightjar:
Before the nightjar sounds his autumn note - "The Ch'u Tz'u: Encountering Sorrow" transl. by Burton Watson
A flock of nightjars watching over me - John Murillo "Dolores, Maybe"
The night-jar is abroad on the heath - "A Sleep Song" transl. by P.H. Pearse
Nuthatch:
the nuthatch, a glutton for its seeds - Jacqueline Osherow "Inspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah"
Oriole.
Osprey:
That collects in the talons of the osprey - Pablo Neruda "Not Only the Albatross" transl. by Jack Schmitt
The kills osprey commit - Avni Vyas "After Bob Across the Street Fires His Gun at a Tree to Scare Off a Raccoon While My Son and I Walk, Rachel Shows Me Night Heron Chicks"
Keeping the ospreys from the chimney - Cynthia Zarin "Ouija Board"
Ostrich:
Ask you to emulate the flight path of an ostrich - dee(dee) c. ardan "freedom terrors"
What ostriches couldn't digest - Guy Wetmore Carryl "The Singular Sangfroid of Baby Bunting"
Eight pairs of ostriches in harness - Marianne Moore "He 'Digesteth Harde Yron'"
A lullaby of ostriches and emus - Deborah Ruddell "Penguin's Lullaby"
Owl.
Ox-Bird:
The ox-birds chase the tide - Lord de Tabley "The Churchyard on the Sands"
Parakeet:
A flock of wild parakeets comes to roost - Alexandra Lytton Regalado "La Mano"
Parrot.
Partridge.
Peacock.
Peafowl:
The number of bones in a peafowl - Hala Alyan "Siri as Mother"
Pelican.
Penguin:
Penguins fly through watersky - Eileen Spinelli "Water-Wings"
Peregrine:
a sparrow no one had kept an eye on except the peregrine - Ed Roberson "once the magnolia has blossomed"
Petrel:
To the petrel the swooping gale - Thomas Bailey Aldrich "Monody on the Death of Wendell Phillips"
Culvert, and petrel, and mangonel - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]
Safe as the petrel on tossing billow - Emily Bronte "The Two Children"
The petrel's wind flew over eternity - Pablo Neruda "Not Only the Albatross" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Pewit:
The pewit's cry only makes deeper nature's rest - Kirtle "My Home in Annandale Revisited" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.6-v.I, 9 Feb. 1884]
Pheasant.
Pigeon.
Pileated Woodpecker:
The pileated woodpecker's maniacal laugh - Chris Dombrowski "They Tied the Madmen to Trees Beside the River and All the Shrinks Went Out of Business"
Plover:
The plover of the lonesome hills - "The Fisherman's Keen, or the Lamentation of O'Donoghue of Affadown ('Roaring Water'), in the west of Co. Cork, for his three sons and his son-in-law, who were drowned" transl. by Anonymous
Tern and piping plover that keeps expansion along its shore - francine j. harris "Oregon Trail, Missouri"
And the wail of the plover awakes on the mountain - Henry Scott Riddell "When the Glen All Is Still"
Poultry:
Often with our Poultry running - "Fox Chace" [sic] [W. Belch's British Sports, for the Amusement of Children]
Quail.
Quetzal:
The outspread plumes of the quetzal bird - "III: Occe al Mismo Tono Tlamelauhcayotl | Another Plain Song, to the Same Tune" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton
The quetzal I've snared - Paige Quinones "Wings Covert"
Raptor:
Raptor of iron plumage - Pablo Neruda "It Was Not You" transl. by Nathaniel Tarn
Raven.
Redbird:
Blue jays & redbirds wove light through leaves - Yusef Komunyakaa "The Whistle"
Ring-Dove:
A ring-dove let fall a sprig of yew - John Keats "Endymion, Book I [A thing of beauty is a joy for ever]"
Robin.
Rock Dove:
Where rock doves would be brought to nest - R.A. Villanueva "When Doves"
Rook.
Rooster.
Sandbird:
Sandbirds twittering glance through crystal air - Emma Lazarus "Fog"
Sandhill Crane:
As Sandhill cranes must thread the meadow - Jennifer Chang "Freedom in Ohio"
Evidence of traffic and sandhill cranes - Alison Swan "Signs"
Sandhill cranes poised between the tall grass and oaks - Emma Trelles "The Function of a Wing"
Screech-Owl:
Again the screech-owl shrieks - Robert Blair "The Grave"
Seabird:
Coax oil from a sea bird's throat - Rachel Dillon "A dead whale can feed an entire ecosystem"
The stasis of a seabird's dive - Paige Quinones "Elegy Ending on the Ocean Floor"
Hear seabirds cackle like ghosts - Yang Lian "Venice Elegy 2 Rot Poem" transl. by Brian Holton
Sea-lark:
The shrill short crying of the sea-lark - Edward Dowden "Among the Rocks"
Sea-Mew:
Yonder sea-mew seeks the inland moss - Thomas Aird "The Old Soldier" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine no.CCCCXXXVI, v.LXXI, Feb. 1852]
Skylark.
Snipe:
The creak of broken rushes and the last snipe's cry - Lloyd Roberts "The Wind Tongues"
Snowbird:
Snowbirds spread their crystallized wings - Daisy Aldan "Mutilated Fire"
Snow birds and sooty herons caught - Mary Jo Bang "Pear and O, an Opera"
Songbird:
Let all the song-birds die of love - Pierre Dupont "A Serenade"
In the timeless throat of the songbird - D'Arcy McNickle "Old Isidore"
Sparrow.
Starling.
Stork:
The cry of a stork landing on the roof - Anna Akhmatova [Untitled] transl. Richard McKane
Swallow, bring the stork with you - "Where Are the Swallows?" [A Tale of Two Monkeys, Project Gutenberg]
Stormbird:
only the stormbird's flight is wild - Elizabeth Bartlett "stormbird"
Sunbird:
Sunbirds exalting the break of dawn - Gospel Chinedu "In a Tissue Processing Class the Lecturer Tells the Biafra War Through the Lenses of a Microscope"
Mountains and rivers and crimson sunbirds - Keith Taylor "Picasso and the Taj Mahal"
Swallow (bird).
Swan.
Tanager:
Whirling tanagers sucked in a wind-pocket - Amy Lowell "Red Slippers"
Tern:
Tern and piping plover that keeps expansion along its shore - francine j. harris "Oregon Trail, Missouri"
Thrush.
Towhee:
Notes and dyes of jay and towhee - May Swenson "Rain at Wildwood"
Turkey:
Three wild turkeys crossing the street - January Gill O'Neil "How to Love"
Turkey Vulture:
Turkey vultures circling in two by two - Douglas S. Jones "Sexy in the Food Chain"
Vulture.
Warbler.
Waterfowl:
Morning run among the lilies and the rowdy waterfowl - Scott Cairns "Idiot Psalms 2: A psalm of Isaak, accompanied by baying hounds"
Whippoorwill.
Wild-Bird:
Sweet chant of the wild-birds' morning hymn - Louisa May Alcott "Lily-Bell and Thistledown"
The wild bird flew scared from her desolate stone - Rev. James Gilborne Lyons "The Return to Lezayre" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal no.456, 25 Sept. 1852]
Wild Geese:
Wild geese moved like a wedge between sky and sagebrush - Yusef Komunyakaa "The Whistle"
To fly like those two wild geese, rising with beating wings - "Wild Geese" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
Wildfowl:
Big lagoons where wildfowl play - Andrew Barton 'Banjo' Paterson "Travelling Post Office"
Wood Drake:
Where the wood drake rests in his beauty - Wendell Berry "The Peace of Wild Things"
Woodpecker.
Wood-Thrush:
The wood-thrush ceased her song - Louise Imogen Guiney "The Rise of the Tide"
Whistle vespers to the wood thrush - Rosanna Warren "Man in Stream"
Wren.
Zebra Finch:
When the zebra finches felt the first pinch of climate change - Amie Whittemore "Future History of Earth's Birds"
Navigation Links:
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.
Avian:
Prayed to avian gods we don't believe in - Keith Taylor "Acolytes in the Bird-While"
Bantam:
And raised a mighty bantam crow - Grace Greenwood "Babie Annie to Cousin J--, acknowledging the Christmas-gift of a chain"
Barn Swallow:
The barn swallows' sharp flight and cry - Diane Seuss "Six Unrhymed Sonnets"
Bird.
Bittern:
Take a string to a bittern's back - Katie Ford "The Throats of Guantanamo"
Heard the bitterns call from ruined palace-wall - Robert Graves "In the Wilderness"
As curlew, hern, and bittern pass - Emily Lawless "The Inalienable Heritage"
The brown bittern speaks in the bog - "A Sleep Song" transl. by P.H. Pearse
Blackbird.
Bluebird.
Bluejay.
Bobolink:
A town full of busy bobolinks - Amber aka Martha Everts Holden "A Little Goldenhead"
A bobolink left the bloom of a tree - Amber aka Martha Everts Holden "The Story of a Rose"
Nor the bobolink's trill the less laughs - Kate Putnam "Excuse" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.4, August 1864]
Bulfinch:
The bulfinch marks me stealing by - C.S. Calverley "Sad Memories"
Buzzard.
Cactus Wren:
the cactus wren finished the lightning - Jake Skeets "Sonoran Desert Poem"
Canadian Geese:Mysteriously enlisted in a V formation of Canadian geese - Duane Ackerson "Three Urban Legends"
Canary:
The blue canary of my country - Ilya Kaminsky "4 a.m. Bombardment"
I would sing as the canary passes - Rickey Laurentiis "Because we love each other"
Canvasback Duck:
Canvasback ducks dodging coyotes - Keith Taylor "The Road from Galahad"
Cardinal:
The flash of cardinal in the reeds - Chelsea B. DesAutels "Annual Migration"
The burden of the cardinal virtues - Ellen Hinsey "Epistle"
Cardinals flying straight up - Diane Mehta "Ode to Patrick Kearns, Funeral Director of the Leo F. Kearns Funeral Home, in Queens"
Chaffinch:
Laugh at chaffinch and at primroses - Robert Graves "Not Dead"
Chickadee.
Chicken.
Cock:
Woe to the cock who strutteth on ice - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry CXV: Woes" transl. by J.W. Wiles
The cock desired the heron's flight - John Gay "Fable IV: Jove's Eagle, and Murmuring Beasts" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]
With a phantom's cockcrow smile - Aldous Huxley "Mole"
Braver notes the storm-cock sings - A.E. Housman "A Shropshire Lad X: March"
Cockatoo:
The green freedom of a cockatoo - Wallace Stevens "Sunday Morning"
Condor.
Cormorant.
Corncrake:
Call of the corncrake, cuckoo, or crane - credited to an emigrant named MacAmbrois "The Exile's Song" transl. by Eleanor Hull
Crane.
Crow.
Crying-Bird:
Disturb'd by the crane's and the crying-bird's screams - F.B.C. "The Quadrupeds' Pic-Nic"
Cuckoo.
Curlew.
Dodo:
The dwelling place for other dodos - Monica de la Torre "View from a Dodo Chair"
As famous as the pterodactyl or the dodo - Alison Hawthorne Deming "Science"
The demise of the dodo - Mary Soon Lee "I, Universe"
Dove.
Drake:
Where the wood drake rests in his beauty - Wendell Berry "The Peace of Wild Things"
Duck.
Eagle.
Egret.
Emu:
A lullaby of ostriches and emus - Deborah Ruddell "Penguin's Lullaby"
Falcon.
Field Sparrow:
One field sparrow song down-falling - Janet Kauffman "Air Here"
Finch.
Firebird:
The storm that douse the firebird - R.B. Lemberg "Firebird, Stormbird"
Fish-Hawk:
Takes from the fish-hawk his newly caught prey - F.B.C. "The Quadrupeds' Pic-Nic"
Flamingo.
Fledge/Fledgling.
Flicker:
First flicker drumming on a dead ash - Keith Taylor "Marginalia for a Natural History"
Fowl.
Gander:
These moonmad swans and ecstatic ganders - Lawrence Ferlinghetti "A Coney Island of the Mind, 11"
And all the ganders flee - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 35: The Pangs and Politics of Love" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
Gannet:
As gannets when the fish are due - John Masefield "The 'Wanderer'"
Geese/Goose.
Goldfinch.
Gosling:
The happy clatter of little goslings - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 225: The Poet's Petition and Praise" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
When every little gosling sings - A.D.T. Whitney "Brahmic"
Grackle:
Sends the grackles into cedars - Frank Stanford "The Solitude of Historical Analysis"
Gray Owl:
Only the frogs and the gray owl know - Don Marquis "In the Bayou"
Great Blue Heron:
Rested in the dignity of the Great Blue Heron - Major Jackson "Song as Abridge Thesis of George Perkins Marsh's Man and Nature"
Great Horned Owl:
Awakened by a great horned owl - Alison Swan "Before the Snow Moon"
Great horned owls have not returned to the heron rookery - Keith Taylor "In Memory: Dan Minock"
Gull/Seagull.
Hawk.
Hen.
Heron.
Honey-Bird:
The honey-birds pipe to the budding figs - Sarojini Naidu "Spring"
Hoot Owl:
A hoot owl called to the moon - Yusef Komunyakaa "Ota Benga at Edenkraal"
House Finch:
House finch weaving its song - Terry Blackhawk "Maumee, Maumee"
Hummingbird.
Ibis:
The Ibis yet returns - Duncan Anderson "Sport"
Stitched by hungry ibises - Campbell McGrath "The Everglades"
Jackdaw:
My jackdaw Muse of the rebel and dark - Stephen Vincent Benet "November Prothalamion"
The jackdaw's noisy company - Giosue Carducci "On My Daughter's Marriage" transl. by Frank Sewall
The chattering jackdaw builds - Alfred Noyes "Darwin III: The Testimony of the Rocks"
Jay.
Junco:
Jays and juncos rallied to see - Bruce Ducker "Picnic"
Dark capped juncos hidden in dense foliage - Philip Levine "For the Country: The Garden"
Kestrel:
Blowing the poising kestrel over - John Masefield "On Malvern Hill"
Kingbird:
As kingfishers catch fire - Gerard Manley Hopkins "As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame"
The kingbird and the pensive thrush are fled - Archibald Lampman "September"
Kingfisher.
Kite.
Lapwing:
Where lapwings float at rest - Herbert Randall "The Angelus of Plymouth Woods"
Through startled lapwings now we run - Mary Webb "Market Day"
Encumbered with the shriek of lapwings - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver
Lark.
Linnet.
Loon.
Lyrebird:
Lyrebird speaking stolen words - Amari Low "Themself"
Macaw:
A fierce macaw on the verandah - Edward Dowden "In the Garden"
Magpie.
Mallard:
Mallards carved in oily silken water - Daisy Aldan "The Bay"
Meadowlark:
Meadow-lark no less than nightingale - James Whitcombe Riley "Three Singing Friends"
Missel-Thrush:
Sweet sings the missel-thrush amid the crash - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.IX--Autumn, in its First Aspect"
Mockingbird.
Moor-Fowl:
Sorrow in the cries of moor-fowls - Winfield Shiras "Sonnet"
Moor-Hen:
The moor-hen stepping from her reeds - Charlotte Mew "On the Asylum Road"
Night-Hawk:
Dream upon the night-hawks peopling heaven - Robert Frost "Waiting-- Afield at Dusk"
Night-Owl:
The little night-owl make her throne - Oscar Wilde "The Grave of Shelley"
Nightingale.
Nightjar:
Before the nightjar sounds his autumn note - "The Ch'u Tz'u: Encountering Sorrow" transl. by Burton Watson
A flock of nightjars watching over me - John Murillo "Dolores, Maybe"
The night-jar is abroad on the heath - "A Sleep Song" transl. by P.H. Pearse
Nuthatch:
the nuthatch, a glutton for its seeds - Jacqueline Osherow "Inspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah"
Oriole.
Osprey:
That collects in the talons of the osprey - Pablo Neruda "Not Only the Albatross" transl. by Jack Schmitt
The kills osprey commit - Avni Vyas "After Bob Across the Street Fires His Gun at a Tree to Scare Off a Raccoon While My Son and I Walk, Rachel Shows Me Night Heron Chicks"
Keeping the ospreys from the chimney - Cynthia Zarin "Ouija Board"
Ostrich:
Ask you to emulate the flight path of an ostrich - dee(dee) c. ardan "freedom terrors"
What ostriches couldn't digest - Guy Wetmore Carryl "The Singular Sangfroid of Baby Bunting"
Eight pairs of ostriches in harness - Marianne Moore "He 'Digesteth Harde Yron'"
A lullaby of ostriches and emus - Deborah Ruddell "Penguin's Lullaby"
Owl.
Ox-Bird:
The ox-birds chase the tide - Lord de Tabley "The Churchyard on the Sands"
Parakeet:
A flock of wild parakeets comes to roost - Alexandra Lytton Regalado "La Mano"
Parrot.
Partridge.
Peacock.
Peafowl:
The number of bones in a peafowl - Hala Alyan "Siri as Mother"
Pelican.
Penguin:
Penguins fly through watersky - Eileen Spinelli "Water-Wings"
Peregrine:
a sparrow no one had kept an eye on except the peregrine - Ed Roberson "once the magnolia has blossomed"
Petrel:
To the petrel the swooping gale - Thomas Bailey Aldrich "Monody on the Death of Wendell Phillips"
Culvert, and petrel, and mangonel - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]
Safe as the petrel on tossing billow - Emily Bronte "The Two Children"
The petrel's wind flew over eternity - Pablo Neruda "Not Only the Albatross" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Pewit:
The pewit's cry only makes deeper nature's rest - Kirtle "My Home in Annandale Revisited" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.6-v.I, 9 Feb. 1884]
Pheasant.
Pigeon.
Pileated Woodpecker:
The pileated woodpecker's maniacal laugh - Chris Dombrowski "They Tied the Madmen to Trees Beside the River and All the Shrinks Went Out of Business"
Plover:
The plover of the lonesome hills - "The Fisherman's Keen, or the Lamentation of O'Donoghue of Affadown ('Roaring Water'), in the west of Co. Cork, for his three sons and his son-in-law, who were drowned" transl. by Anonymous
Tern and piping plover that keeps expansion along its shore - francine j. harris "Oregon Trail, Missouri"
And the wail of the plover awakes on the mountain - Henry Scott Riddell "When the Glen All Is Still"
Poultry:
Often with our Poultry running - "Fox Chace" [sic] [W. Belch's British Sports, for the Amusement of Children]
Quail.
Quetzal:
The outspread plumes of the quetzal bird - "III: Occe al Mismo Tono Tlamelauhcayotl | Another Plain Song, to the Same Tune" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton
The quetzal I've snared - Paige Quinones "Wings Covert"
Raptor:
Raptor of iron plumage - Pablo Neruda "It Was Not You" transl. by Nathaniel Tarn
Raven.
Redbird:
Blue jays & redbirds wove light through leaves - Yusef Komunyakaa "The Whistle"
Ring-Dove:
A ring-dove let fall a sprig of yew - John Keats "Endymion, Book I [A thing of beauty is a joy for ever]"
Robin.
Rock Dove:
Where rock doves would be brought to nest - R.A. Villanueva "When Doves"
Rook.
Rooster.
Sandbird:
Sandbirds twittering glance through crystal air - Emma Lazarus "Fog"
Sandhill Crane:
As Sandhill cranes must thread the meadow - Jennifer Chang "Freedom in Ohio"
Evidence of traffic and sandhill cranes - Alison Swan "Signs"
Sandhill cranes poised between the tall grass and oaks - Emma Trelles "The Function of a Wing"
Screech-Owl:
Again the screech-owl shrieks - Robert Blair "The Grave"
Seabird:
Coax oil from a sea bird's throat - Rachel Dillon "A dead whale can feed an entire ecosystem"
The stasis of a seabird's dive - Paige Quinones "Elegy Ending on the Ocean Floor"
Hear seabirds cackle like ghosts - Yang Lian "Venice Elegy 2 Rot Poem" transl. by Brian Holton
Sea-lark:
The shrill short crying of the sea-lark - Edward Dowden "Among the Rocks"
Sea-Mew:
Yonder sea-mew seeks the inland moss - Thomas Aird "The Old Soldier" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine no.CCCCXXXVI, v.LXXI, Feb. 1852]
Skylark.
Snipe:
The creak of broken rushes and the last snipe's cry - Lloyd Roberts "The Wind Tongues"
Snowbird:
Snowbirds spread their crystallized wings - Daisy Aldan "Mutilated Fire"
Snow birds and sooty herons caught - Mary Jo Bang "Pear and O, an Opera"
Songbird:
Let all the song-birds die of love - Pierre Dupont "A Serenade"
In the timeless throat of the songbird - D'Arcy McNickle "Old Isidore"
Sparrow.
Starling.
Stork:
The cry of a stork landing on the roof - Anna Akhmatova [Untitled] transl. Richard McKane
Swallow, bring the stork with you - "Where Are the Swallows?" [A Tale of Two Monkeys, Project Gutenberg]
Stormbird:
only the stormbird's flight is wild - Elizabeth Bartlett "stormbird"
Sunbird:
Sunbirds exalting the break of dawn - Gospel Chinedu "In a Tissue Processing Class the Lecturer Tells the Biafra War Through the Lenses of a Microscope"
Mountains and rivers and crimson sunbirds - Keith Taylor "Picasso and the Taj Mahal"
Swallow (bird).
Swan.
Tanager:
Whirling tanagers sucked in a wind-pocket - Amy Lowell "Red Slippers"
Tern:
Tern and piping plover that keeps expansion along its shore - francine j. harris "Oregon Trail, Missouri"
Thrush.
Towhee:
Notes and dyes of jay and towhee - May Swenson "Rain at Wildwood"
Turkey:
Three wild turkeys crossing the street - January Gill O'Neil "How to Love"
Turkey Vulture:
Turkey vultures circling in two by two - Douglas S. Jones "Sexy in the Food Chain"
Vulture.
Warbler.
Waterfowl:
Morning run among the lilies and the rowdy waterfowl - Scott Cairns "Idiot Psalms 2: A psalm of Isaak, accompanied by baying hounds"
Whippoorwill.
Wild-Bird:
Sweet chant of the wild-birds' morning hymn - Louisa May Alcott "Lily-Bell and Thistledown"
The wild bird flew scared from her desolate stone - Rev. James Gilborne Lyons "The Return to Lezayre" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal no.456, 25 Sept. 1852]
Wild Geese:
Wild geese moved like a wedge between sky and sagebrush - Yusef Komunyakaa "The Whistle"
To fly like those two wild geese, rising with beating wings - "Wild Geese" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
Wildfowl:
Big lagoons where wildfowl play - Andrew Barton 'Banjo' Paterson "Travelling Post Office"
Wood Drake:
Where the wood drake rests in his beauty - Wendell Berry "The Peace of Wild Things"
Woodpecker.
Wood-Thrush:
The wood-thrush ceased her song - Louise Imogen Guiney "The Rise of the Tide"
Whistle vespers to the wood thrush - Rosanna Warren "Man in Stream"
Wren.
Zebra Finch:
When the zebra finches felt the first pinch of climate change - Amie Whittemore "Future History of Earth's Birds"
Navigation Links:
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.