Friday, May 31, 2013

Bird Repair






The nurse called just as I coaxed the broken-wing bluebird into a box. “Your mother’s in poor health,” she said, “your mother’s dying, your mother’s dead.” I should call the funeral home, the florist, the gravedigger, but first I have to get this bird to the bird doctor, the fellow with the ostrich plume-design on his stationery. He specializes in bird repair. They come in broken and leave more or less whole. Some get artificial wings that beat by means of a hearing-aid battery, slung under the bird’s body like an amulet. Some get new beaks to replace those blunted by crashing into windows. The doc shapes the new beak from plastic, fusing it to the old beak-stump with superglue.
The doc is in. The bluebird perks up when I open the box and the doc’s big blond Viking-face peers in. The bird chirps, and then bursts into song. I think the tune is “That Old Black Magic,” but I haven’t heard it in that key before. “Nothing wrong with his beak,” the doc opines. He touches the bent wing and then flexes it. “Not broken, not at all, just sprained.” I’m so grateful. I explain that my mother is dead. “Everyone’s mother is dead,” he observes, “or will be. You could bring her in and I could try to fix her, but reactivation doesn’t always please the reactivated. Think of her happiness. If she returned from death, what would she tell the neighbors?” I agree to think. The doc poses the bird on his thick right forefinger and smiles at it. The bluebird launches into a Gershwin medley, rounding every note with a smile.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Wild turkeys



 

 

 

The Simplest Geometries


Wild turkeys browse in the yard.
Their teardrop bodies look solid;
their tiny heads and feet work
the ground so briskly not a grub,
insect, or kernel will survive.

They cast shadows thick enough
to prevent the tatters of snow
from thawing. Toms in full display
stagger with the effort of fanning
their feathers in sun-shaped arcs.

Busy feeding, the hens ignore them.
Tomorrow I’ll have to clean the yard
by running a wet-dry vacuum
tethered to the house by a cord
fifty feet long. Years ago I dreamt

of hanging myself with that cord.
I looped it around a gargoyle
on the façade of Notre Dame
and swung myself above the tourists
crowding the Ile de la Cité.

Why did I awaken so refreshed
by what should have been a nightmare?
The grim sensation of smirking
over the plaza while treading
nothing but sky still lingers

with an air of accomplishment.
The turkeys will loiter all day.
They aren’t afraid of me. Their shadows
reorganize the April light
into the simplest geometries.

Their appetites steer them here
and there over tiny plots of earth
they own for as long as they can feed.
The glory of their presence costs me
only a few handfuls of seed.




Saturday, March 16, 2013

Backyard bobcat




This youngster (maybe 15-18 pounds) showed up a few days ago and has been with us since.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

OSH






OSH


Myra puddled among beige cats.
Beige herself, she disappears
except for her bat-ears looming
above the crowd. The other cats
welcome Myra’s alien features:

elongated head, spindle legs,
whippet tail. She’s popular,
and fecund, once, giving birth
to more than twenty litters
of Oriental Shorthair kittens.

After eight years, too exhausted
to continue, she faced extinction;
but the shelter queen snatched her
from her indifferent owner’s grasp.
She’s the only sample of her breed

among a hundred and fifty cats—
yet unadoptable, unwilling
to live in a house lacking cats
enough to shield her from the world.
Five years huddled here among

cats glad to have her. Sometimes
she withdraws to the under-parts
of a tattered upholstered chair
and snores her old lady snore
alone in the dark. More often

we find her cuddled with her friends,
all complementing her color.
We brush and feed her as if she
alone occupied this shelter;
and the sixty other cats

in this room gaze upon her
with a certain satisfaction,
as if her exotic framework,
more like a monkey’s than a cat’s,
flattered by comparison.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Loki Adopted






Loki Adopted

Loki of white and orange bulk
bullies through the Pumpkin Corridor,
scattering Queenie, Gemini,

Little Ben, Angel, and others.
Loki wants people to admire him,
but like the child of “Animula”

he’s both precocious and wild.
Tensile and poised, his repose
seems a mode of attack. Needy

as only large male cats can be,
he claims all available space.
His friends are patient. Queenie,

fearless and half his size, bumps him
from a food dish. Gemini
huddles against him and purrs.

Angel sneers down from the perch
she holds against the gravest assault.
Little Ben wants only to play.

On a brimming autumn Saturday
Loki gets lucky. Someone needs him,
only him. A cat carrier yawns

and he’s gone forever, his new home
out of state, out of mind. The space
he occupied hums as cats compete

to fill it. Little Ben, owl-eyed
tux cat, and Queenie, gray tiger,
cuddle into place so the gap

in the Pumpkin Gang doesn’t show.
They’ll remember Loki, of course,
but the flux of cats engages them,

and he’ll recede into the distance
in a patter of faded pawprints,
fragile as a dusting of snow.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Hamilton and Bianca







Hamilton and Bianca



Hamilton and Bianca, siblings,
look fresh as bread from the bakery.
White-dominant calico
Bianca, reddish-splotched white guy
Hamilton arrive attached

as if still in the womb. Spaying
almost undoes Bianca. Careless,
sloppy work allotted shelter cats
leaves her so loosely half-stitched
she almost spills her innards

and has to see a second vet
for repair. Separated, caged,
the siblings droop like daffodils.
Hamilton tries to befriend
his neighbor, but pines for his sister.

She curls into a seashell-shape
and refuses, when petted, to purr.
The life of the big room grinds on.
Bianca heals, but she’s sorry
she ever became a cat. A couple

employed by MIT arrive,
embrace the siblings, depart
with two cat carriers brimming.
A week later a chronicle,
with photos: brother and sister

playing, eating, trailing after
their doting human companions.
The last photo: two cats curled
together so tightly they merge.
The caption: “All tuckered out.”