Catherine Chandler's Poetry Blog

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Spring has arrived in Uruguay!

 


Ostensibly about the "hornero" (as the ovenbird is called in Uruguay), the last two lines of this intricate Spenserian sonnet give a clue to my thoughts on free verse.

 

The Ovenbird


In Uruguay, in spring, I’ve often heard

lighthearted trills along a dusty road:

the lively, undiminished ovenbird

sings as she builds her intricate abode.

The wily swallow, with no stringent code

of constancy, surveys the chambered nest;

and knows that, following this episode

of eggs with which the other bird is blessed,

he’ll snatch the abdicated space. Hard-pressed

though he may be for time, for love, for will,

too wise to prove an uninvited guest,

he waits it out upon a windowsill.

The ovenbird, deemed artless by the swallow,

to practiced eyes is one tough act to follow.

 

 

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