and when the cat had finished drinking 
and he had watched that delicate pink tongue 
lapping as carefully as any lady 
and had wondered whether cats enjoy this patient method 
or whether they long to pour it down their throats, carelessly 
and savagely, as they live wildly in the nights 
 
then he heard the poem call 
faintly, almost indifferently, the sound unmistakeable 
yet always different 
this time it came from a far distance 
beyond the cat, though the cat was somehow part of it,  
beyond the yard where he had once and never forgot 
put a bullet into the old dog that 
could not stop shaking 
 
beyond the barn, beyond the field 
where he nuzzled his favourite of the horses 
and it allowed  this intimacy, patiently;  
 
so far beyond, so faint, the cry that poems make 
as they, like cats, like dogs, like horses 
who know nature so much more certainly than we 
the sound that poems make as they wait patiently 
to be found 
 
he walked towards it but many times was lost,  
he had to stop, stand still, listen,  
and wait to hear that sound 
recognisable but different every time 
 
and when he and the poem had found each other 
they were for a moment, silent, still,  
then both turned to look over his shoulder 
to  where, yet further still,  
the next poem had begun to call to him, faintly, almost indifferently,  
the sound familiar, yet never quite the same
Michael Shepherd
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-poem-called/