Margaret Atwood is on message. Not, mind you, about The Testaments, the acclaimed new book she鈥檚 promoting, a sequel to her most famous novel and Emmy award鈥搘inning TV series The Handmaid鈥檚 Tale.
In fact, Atwood does not seem all that interested in speaking about her writing, herself, or even her considerable passion for birding. Canada鈥檚 outspoken novelist, accomplished poet, and avian advocate extraordinaire has a talking point: how the birds themselves are doing.
Editor's note: Scroll down to read several new avian-themed poems by Margaret Atwood, first published here.
We鈥檙e on the phone while she鈥檚 on book tour, just before The Testaments Booker Prize for Fiction, and I ask her about how birds are used as symbols in literature, a tactic that she deploys often. A cursory answer, then the pivot: 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 we talk about why birds are important,鈥 she says. Later, this time with a chuckle punctuating her trademark wry monotone, she turns a question I have posed around with this: 鈥淭hat鈥檚 important from the point of view of people, but let鈥檚 talk about it as being important from the point of view of birds.鈥
I鈥檓 finally getting the message, and Atwood is hoping many others are, too.
As she talks about climate change, insecticides, 鈥渃atios鈥 for outdoor cats, invasive rat eradication, and more, it鈥檚 clear that she cares deeply not only about avian health but also about our own. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 consider birds in isolation from everything else. If you see them as symptoms, the worse things are for birds, the worse they鈥檙e going to be for us eventually,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you follow birds, it allows you to get a pretty global view of what鈥檚 happening to the planet.鈥
In ancient times, augurs divined omens in the flights of birds, and Atwood keeps up this tradition. Much of her most well-known fiction envisions worlds that are dark, dystopian, or apocalyptic; she tells me that such tales can be read as 鈥渂lueprints鈥 of societal paths we might try to avoid. But the future is not all doom, she says, or at least it doesn鈥檛 have to be鈥攂ird populations can also reflect ecosystem and environmental recovery.
That鈥檚 happening on Pelee Island in Lake Erie, a key stopover for migrating birds where Atwood and her late partner Graeme Gibson have had a house for decades. On Pelee, in the early 2000s, they helped launch , a birding and literature festival, and establish . Bald Eagles, once decimated by DDT and illegal shooting, are making a comeback on the isle. 鈥淥nce upon a time people would have shot them,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he attitude has really changed towards them, and that鈥檚 a message of a kind, too. People are waking up to the fact that nature is not limitless, and that our behavior as human beings can severely affect it.鈥
Atwood, who grew up spending time in Canada鈥檚 woods, where her entomologist father worked, isn鈥檛 always so grave about her avian interests. Whether she鈥檚 mimicking the call of a loon before a packed audience or cat ears and a bird cape to give a keynote to the International Ornithological Congress (a reference to her 2016 graphic novel, ), animals bring out her playful side, too.
We also do eventually talk about her birding life. Of her father, a 鈥渃rack birder,鈥 she remembers: 鈥淗e didn鈥檛 go hither and thither around the world watching birds, but he just knew all the birds in the area.鈥 After she met Gibson鈥攁 novelist and who 鈥攕he says they did travel 鈥渉ither and thither鈥 and saw a variety of astonishing birds.
Because Gibson, in his , once wrote beautifully about how, much like composing poetry, 鈥渂irdwatching can encourage a state of being close to rapture,鈥 I feel clever asking Atwood if she can recall any such moments they shared together. But she鈥檚 not having the sentimental question, and I have to laugh as she shuts me down again: 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 stop in the middle of watching a bird and say, 鈥楬ey, are you having a rapturous moment? Yeah, gee, so am I.鈥 It鈥檚 not how life goes.鈥 By now, I should have known: Atwood鈥檚 focus on birds doesn鈥檛 waver.
Feather
Margaret AtwoodOne by handfuls the feathers fell.
Windsheer, sunbleach, owlwar,
some killer with a shotgun,
who can tell?
But I found them here on the quasi-lawn 鈥
I don鈥檛 know whose torn skin 鈥
a splayed calligraphy of plumes,
remains of a god that melted
too near the moon.
A high flyer once,
as we all were.
Every life is a failure
at the last hour,
the hour of dried blood.
But nothing, we like to think,
is wasted, so I picked up one from the slaughter,
sharpened and split the quill,
hunted for ink,
and drew this poem
with you, dead bird.
With your spent flight,
with your fading panic,
with your eye spiralling down,
with your night.
Crow Funeral
Margaret AtwoodAlert! Alert!
A crow has pecked the dirt
and lies in mud and grass,
eye slitted, slack
wing, curled claw,
heart inert.
Who did it? There鈥檚 no blood!
Where is the lethal shadow?
What poison, stone, or arrow?
We flap and shout:
Danger! Danger!
Raw! Raw!
But danger from what?
Come all ye crows!
Come gather in the trees
to mourn and rage!
Ruffle your sleek black feathers!
Chant our crow dirge,
both requiem and roar
of our baffled army!
Raw! Raw! From every angry bill!
O Death, silent foe,
invisible as a wormy smell 鈥
War! War!
If we could only see you
we鈥檇 kill and kill.
Fatal Light Awareness
Margaret AtwoodA thrush crashed into my window:
one lovely voice the less
killed by glass as mirror 鈥
a rich magician鈥檚 illusion of trees 鈥
and by my laziness:
Why didn鈥檛 I hang the lattice?
Up there in the night air
among the highrises, music dies
as you fire up your fake sunrises:
your light is the birds鈥 last darkness.
All over everywhere
their feathers are falling 鈥
warm, not like snow 鈥
though melting away to nothing.
We are a dying symphony.
No bird knows this,
but us 鈥 we know
what our night magic does.
Our dark light magic.
Midway Island
Albatross Carcase
Margaret AtwoodInside the barebones
ribs it鈥檚 all bright colour:
a tag a ribbon
a failed balloon
a strip of silver foil
a spring a wheel a coil
What should have been there
inside the sad bag
of wispy feathers,
inside the dead bird child?
It should have been the fuel
for wings, it should have been
upsoaring over a clean sea;
not this glittering mess,
this festering nestwork
Fear of Birds
Margaret AtwoodYou said he was afraid of birds?
How could that be?
Someone so tall?
It wasn鈥檛 the augury.
Maybe the metal voices,
gold, silver, zinc.
A jingling, a scream, a scrape.
Or a dripping sound in the dry forest.
Tink. Tink. Tink. Tink.
Not to be confused with singing.
Or the close-up craziness of the eyes:
yellow, red, not cozy.
Inside that skull you鈥檙e not even a thought.
Wings of some sort. Like those of angels,
angels with claws.
Maybe that鈥檚 it.
A rustling, like thin paper.
Then feathers over the nose and mouth.
Muffled. A white smothering.
You said he was afraid of snow?
Much the same thing.
This story originally ran in the Winter 2019 issue as 鈥淧oems and Portents.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .鈥
All poems, "Feather," "Fear of Birds," "Crow Funeral," "Fatal Light Awareness," and "Midway Island Albatross Carcase," 漏 Margaret Atwood, 2019.