Children's Poem: Sonoran Kangaroo

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Children's Poem: Sonoran Kangaroo

Mostly eyes,

back feet,

and six-inches

of tip-tufted tail            

comprise                         

this silky seed-eater

who sleeps all day,

then forages

desert scrub and bush,

packing the night’s cache

in a pouch on each cheek.   

 

If you are more quiet

than the silent night-glide

of a wide-eyed owl,

or can lie coyote-quiet

near the mesquite

shedding its seedy beans,     

you might happen to see

a kangaroo rat provisioning,

but, oh, my, if you do:

ready yourself for a B-I-G

surprise as this palm-sized

hunter leaps its nine-foot leap,

then again and again

deep  deep  into  the safe night.

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A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness. It finds the thought and the thought finds the words.

Robert Frost (1875-1963) American Poet.

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