Friday, April 15, 2011

Woodchucks by Maxine Kumin

Gassing the woodchucks didn't turn out right.
The knockout bomb from the Feed and Grain Exchange
was featured as merciful, quick at the bone
and the case we had against them was airtight,
both exits shoehorned shut with puddingstone,
but they had a sub-sub-basement out of range.

Next morning they turned up again, no worse
for the cyanide than we for our cigarettes
and state-store Scotch, all of us up to scratch.
They brought down the marigolds as a matter of course
and then took over the vegetable patch
nipping the broccoli shoots, beheading the carrots.

The food from our mouths, I said, righteously thrilling
to the feel of the .22, the bullets' neat noses.
I, a lapsed pacifist fallen from grace
puffed with Darwinian pieties for killing,
now drew a bead on the little woodchuck's face.
He died down in the everbearing roses.

Ten minutes later I dropped the mother. She
flipflopped in the air and fell, her needle teeth
still hooked in a leaf of early Swiss chard.
Another baby next. O one-two-three
the murderer inside me rose up hard,
the hawk eye killer came on stage forthwith.

There's one chuck left. Old wily fellow, he keeps
me cocked and ready day after day after day.
All night I hunt his humped-up form. I dream
I sight along the barrel in my sleep.
If only they'd all consented to die unseen
gassed underground the quiet Nazi way.

The allusion to the Holocaust - "gassed underground the quiet Nazi way" - at the end of the poem explains Kumin's feelings towards the woodchucks: she basically wants to exterminate all of them, and tries many different methods to get rid of them all. Kumin uses a lot of imagery to describe the killing of the woodchucks - "she flipflopped in the air and fell, her needle teeth still hooked in a leaf of early Swiss chard". Despite her efforts, one of these woodchucks remains, and she knows that her job is incomplete unless she manages to kill them all. This poem shows a darker side to Kumin - although she lives on a farm and loves her horses, she is not afraid to get "down and dirty" at times and she knows she must get rid of the woodchucks to help her farm.

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