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Robinson Jeffers - The Beaks Of EaglesRobinson Jeffers - The Beaks Of Eagles
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An eagle`s nest on the head of an old redwood on one of the precipice-footed ridges Above Ventana Creek, that jagged country which nothing but a falling meteor will ever plow; no horseman Will ever ride there, no hunter cross this ridge but the winged ones, no one will steal the eggs from this fortress. The she-eagle is old, her mate was shot long ago, she is now mated with a son of hers. When lightning blasted her nest she built it again on the same tree, in the splinters of the thunderbolt. The she-eagle is older than I; she was here when the fires of eighty-five raged on these ridges, She was lately fledged and dared not hunt ahead of them but ate scorched meat. The world has changed in her time; Humanity has multiplied, but not here; men`s hopes and thoughts and customs have changed, their powers are enlarged, Their powers and their follies have become fantastic, The unstable animal never has been changed so rapidly. The motor and the plane and the great war have gone over him, And Lenin has lived and Jehovah died: while the mother-eagle Hunts her same hills, crying the same beautiful and lonely cry and is never tired; dreams the same dreams, And hears at night the rock-slides rattle and thunder in the throats of these living mountains.                                                 It is good for man To try all changes, progress and corruption, powers, peace and anguish, not to go down the dinosaur`s way Until all his capacities have been explored: and it is good for him To know that his needs and nature are no more changed in fact in ten thousand years than the beaks of eagles.
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