Appetite

Alexandria Hall

You can call the chickadees with a repeated psh sound,
like popping tires or an air mattress. My uncle’s a birder,

he tells me these things. He can spend hours
behind a pair of binoculars, waiting for the sight

of some rare fistful of feathers. I wish I cared more
about the birds, but I am interested in omens,

which share their roots with ornithology—
the direction of a vulture’s flight could help divine

the will of the gods. That, and the willingness of a lamb
to approach the altar. There’s a farm in these mountains

run by vegans, who raise Icelandic sheep to feed,
ethically, they say, the appetites of others. Spot

the young rams in the shaking brush. They emerge, as if floating
under thick coats, decked in leaves, weeks before the slaughter.

Alexandria Hall is the author of Field Music, a winner of the National Poetry Series. She lives in Los Angeles.
Originally published:
October 5, 2020

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