THE RAVEN REVIEW
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Contributors
    • Support Us
  • Submit
  • Current Issue
  • Archive
    • Volume I >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume II >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume III >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume IV >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume V >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume VI >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Contributors
    • Support Us
  • Submit
  • Current Issue
  • Archive
    • Volume I >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume II >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume III >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume IV >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume V >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume VI >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II

The Songbird

by Ezra Flowers
You gutted me open
Like a pretty white cat
Peels the fascia from a songbird
And tenderly licks the organs underneath

The white cat savors its meal
It venerates every part of its prize
And when the carcass is forgotten
It looks to its master for praise

The sun draws its anchors starboard
The white cat arches its back
When it flees from the moon's beauty
I hope it's haunted by silence

Gone are the tuneless intervals
And gone is the disjointed refrain
The songbird's voice is only a memory
Your master will never mind again
​
But you will, because I'll always crawl back to you.

Ezra Flowers is a hopeless romantic in a complicated love triangle between the arts and the humanities. As a transgender man, he has become used to over analyzing his feelings, putting his obsession with character and philosophy on display in his work. A Californian from birth, his frequent exposures to nature comes easily as symbolism, featuring trees, birds, and the vast ocean as motifs in his poems time and time again. "The Songbird" displays each of these characteristics equally.