Wednesday, 8 August 2012

Osprey


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An Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) preparing to dive at Kennedy Space Center, Florida. It stares intently at prey as it extends its talons. Osprey nests are found throughout the Kennedy Space Center and nearby Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge: photo by NASA, 10 June 2004 (NASA)

 
I think he'll be to Rome
As is the osprey to the fish, who takes it
By sovereignty of nature.


-- William Shakespeare: Coriolanus, IV.5


Domination is not a pretty thing
though in the non-human world

natural. Lesser before greater
must make way, and when enters
into the equation the reversible talon
that allows the osprey
to rotate the helpless prey
with great efficiency
as it is consumed, the unarguable
point is made. Power
needs no logic, fair
is not a term
in its vocabulary;
and when threatened
innocence cries out to justice
for mercy, there comes back only
silence upon the thermal currents
of the inexhaustible dominion
of the air.




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Osprey (Pandion haliaetus), Table Mountain (Skamania County, Washington): photo by Walter Siegmund, 18 April 2010

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Osprey (Pandion haliaetus), Table Mountain (Skamania County, Washington): photo by Walter Siegmund, 18 April 2010

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Osprey (Pandion haliaetus), Table Mountain (Skamania County, Washington): photo by Walter Siegmund, 18 April 2010

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Osprey (Pandion haliaetus), Bradford Island Viewpoint, Bonneville Dam: photo by Walter Siegmund, 18 April 2010



Osprey with fish, Strand State Beach near Azure Street, Morro Bay, California: photo by Mike Baird, 12 October 2006

9 comments:

  1. Beautiful cry screech
    echoing down
    river corridor
    above
    below
    through
    Glide
    Merlin
    Umpqua
    across
    the Half Shell
    tip tops
    to the snag
    huge piled nest
    white water
    underneath
    that's how we
    know them
    plus the fish

    ReplyDelete
  2. My goodness--
    working the air
    working the water
    "fair not a term"
    Tom Clark
    "for mercy"
    Tom Clark
    "of the air"

    ReplyDelete
  3. Tom,

    I saw two of them out there above the channel a few mornings ago, wheeling

    "silence upon the thermal currents"

    "As is the osprey to the fish" --

    file:///Users/stephenratcliffe/Desktop/Osprey%20-%20the%20ultimate%20fisher%20-%20YouTube.webarchive

    8.8

    first silver edge of sun above shadowed
    plane of ridge, red-tailed hawk calling
    in foreground, wave sounding in channel

    were with these, atmosphere
    in those things which

    horizontal line, enough for
    but rather, which can

    cloudless blue sky reflected in channel,
    gibbous moon above point across from it

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  4. "Power/ needs no logic", but we sketch out systems, cradle it in legislative arms.

    Human dominion is undoubtedly exhaustible; the trouble is, we wear a world out along with our rule.

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  5. The fish
    without its head
    seems out of place
    up in the sky
    on the branch
    with the osprey
    curled tongue
    eye wild
    dominating
    we say
    against
    the sky
    shell

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  6. "Wheeling"; "working the air, working the water" -- this would be the SOP of the Osprey.

    'Tis its nature.

    The exhaustion and illogic of human dominion, on the other hand -- no such defense.

    Shakespeare, that fisher of useful lore, was willing prey to the old wives' (probably not old fishermen's) tale about the fish, seeing the osprey, simply surrendering and rolling over on their backs, belly up, the better to be rapt up and devoured.

    Doubtless there are human folk who, in the face of the messengers of human domination, might try that trick, cherishing foolish hopes of mercy, or of being overlooked, or of being spared yet worse pain.

    History is over-laden with instance.

    But fish are probably less silly.

    Ah, but what an amazing machine of boundless rapacity and wheeling flight and deadly skill, the Osprey!

    Colouring your mere Blitzkriegs, your Stukas, your Tomahawks and smart bombs, green with rusty envy.

    A six foot wingspan, rounded talons, an outer toe that is reversible, so that the prey may be grasped with two toes in front and two behind, and a formidable appetite for fish.

    The name derives from Anglo-Norman ospriet and Medieval Latin avis prede "bird of prey," from avis praedæ. Pliny the Elder called this formidable raptor ossifraga, or "bone breaker".

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  7. Amazing bird, concise yet sweeping poem—a killer combo.

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  8. Once saw a hawk with a bunny in its claws, lifting o'er--the anguishing pink

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  9. somewhere in the burgerking,pizza
    hut dominoes mc donald kentucy fried colonel arbys hardees applebees red lobster olive garden sonic wendy's denny's cracker barrel godfather's friendly's
    outback

    there's a food chain
    not as elegant
    however

    ReplyDelete