Bright orange feathers like the sun
Piercing red eyes
A silent warhorn, Warning the whole forest of its presence
Minute but deadly like a dart frog
It is the pitohui
Razor sharp beak and claws like samurai swords
Dangerous
Coat of brilliant orange feathers
Fatal
Ruby eyes like crimson flames of the abyss
Terrifying
Every beast and every being in the forest
Acknowledging the pitohui
The greenery and flowers part
Like the royal guard
The tigers and black bears bow
Like faithful generals
The sun shines down like a spotlight
In the spotlight
You ruffle your powerful wings
Your bold and beautiful colors, glistering in the sun
Like a star
Elegant and magnificent yet you are
The most lethal and poisonous bird known to man
The pitohui
By Samuel Park
Reflection
- I published an ode.
- I choose the Pitohui out of sheer luck. When I was looking for a random inspiration I came across an article about the Pitohui. I thought writing about a poisonous bird would be interesting so I wrote an ode.
- The tone of my poem is glorious.
- The theme of my poem is that the Pitohui should be respected and feared.
- Razor sharp beak and claws like samurai swords is a simile. This line shows that the Pitohui is dangerous, showing exactly why the bird should be feared. The tigers and black bears bow is an example of personification and alliteration. This line adds to the theme by showing respect to the Pitohui.
- I changed beautiful to elegant and magnificent because i wanted to use more advanced words to describe the bird and I had already used beautiful. I also added a line that says like the royal guard to emphasize the power of the bird.
- It was difficult to find an inspiration because I had no idea what to write about but after I decided that I was writing about the Pitohui it was easy.
- I think my final draft came out better than I thought it would. At first I thought I would have hard time adding figurative language, but I didn’t have much trouble coming up with lines for my ode.