Griffin Poetry Prize 2007
International Winner
Book: Scar Tissue
Poet: Charles Wright
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Charles Wright reads The Woodpecker Pecks, but the Hole Does Not Appear
The Woodpecker Pecks, but the Hole Does Not Appear, by Charles Wright
The Woodpecker Pecks, but the Hole Does Not Appear
It’s hard to imagine how unremembered we all become,
How quickly all that we’ve done
Is unremembered and unforgiven,
how quickly
Bog lilies and yellow clover flashlight our footfalls,
How quickly and finally the landscape subsumes us,
And everything that we are becomes what we are not.This is not new, the orange finch
And the yellow and dun finch
picking the dry clay politely,
The grasses asleep in their green slips
Before the noon can roust them,
The sweet oblivion of the everyday
like a warm waistcoat
Over the cold and endless body of memory.Cloud-scarce Montana morning.
July, with its blue cheeks puffed out like a putto on an ancient map,
Huffing the wind down from the northwest corner of things,
Tweets on the evergreen stumps,
swallows treading the air,
The ravens hawking from tree to tree, not you, not you,
Is all that the world allows, and all one could wish for.From Scar Tissue, by Charles Wright
Copyright © 2006 by Charles Wright