Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
I
 Among twenty snowy mountains,   
 The only moving thing   
 Was the eye of the blackbird.   
 II
 I was of three minds,   
 Like a tree   
 In which there are three blackbirds.   
 III
 The blackbird whirled in the autumn winds.   
 It was a small part of the pantomime.   
 IV
 A man and a woman   
 Are one.   
 A man and a woman and a blackbird   
 Are one.   
 V
 I do not know which to prefer,   
 The beauty of inflections   
 Or the beauty of innuendoes,   
 The blackbird whistling   
 Or just after.   
 VI
 Icicles filled the long window   
 With barbaric glass.   
 The shadow of the blackbird   
 Crossed it, to and fro.   
 The mood   
 Traced in the shadow   
 An indecipherable cause.   
 VII
 O thin men of Haddam,   
 Why do you imagine golden birds?   
 Do you not see how the blackbird   
 Walks around the feet   
 Of the women about you?   
 VIII
 I know noble accents   
 And lucid, inescapable rhythms;   
 But I know, too,   
 That the blackbird is involved   
 In what I know.   
 IX
 When the blackbird flew out of sight,   
 It marked the edge   
 Of one of many circles.   
 X
 At the sight of blackbirds   
 Flying in a green light,   
 Even the bawds of euphony   
 Would cry out sharply.   
 XI
 He rode over Connecticut   
 In a glass coach.   
 Once, a fear pierced him,   
 In that he mistook   
 The shadow of his equipage   
 For blackbirds.   
 XII
 The river is moving.   
 The blackbird must be flying.   
 XIII
 It was evening all afternoon.   
 It was snowing   
 And it was going to snow.   
 The blackbird sat   
 In the cedar-limbs.
                    
                        Wallace Stevens, “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird” from The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens. Copyright 1954 by Wallace Stevens. Reprinted with the permission of Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc.