A poem about the expression of love |
I Birds always sing in the morning But one Saturday It was the children flocking That woke me. My wife came To tell me what they had found. It was small and orange And out of place Beside the parked car. A half grown pumpkin of feathers. An owl in the street During the day Surrounded by a closing circle of children Slowly building up the courage To get closer To poke at it with sticks. It looked at me With half closed, drowsy eyes And swiveled its head a few ticks “Is it alright?” the children asked. An owl in the street During the day. My cat watched From the grass behind me Low to the ground As I gently scooped up the bird And it fit in the palm of my hands Like my wife’s cheek. The owl didn’t move or hoot and blink And I placed it in a small box. My cat would have killed it If not for all the children And he hated me then for taking it away. He probably loved that owl The only way a cat can love By wanting it dead. I drove it to a bird sanctuary Thirty miles down Route 4 Where they rescue injured birds Driving slow and avoiding the bumps. The owl just stood in the box Facing forward as I drove Its eyes, yellow slits There was no sadness there or fear As if on a street or in a box Were places owls often go. When I got there I carried the box Into the infirmary To give to a nurse Who cradled the owl in her hands The way she held her child’s cheek, And I spent the rest of the morning at the sanctuary Admiring all the birds of prey Safe and secure in their cages. II My cat used to be a kitten And was very soft and cute. He would play and purr and run And sleep curled up in my hand. I don’t know what happened To make that kitten into a cat. It wasn’t something I taught him Or survival. One day he was just a cat. There was nothing I could do. He was a gangster Fat, delinquent and rotten. Owls kill mice to eat them and survive. Cats kill mice because they desire to. They love them too much to let them live. My cat does not make love To his girlfriends under the bushes. They fuck. They claw and bite and scream and cry And afterwards he saunters home Bloody, worn and delighted To lick himself and sleep, To dream of killing mice and birds And try at it again with his mistresses When his wounds all heal. III The dinner at my brother’s house was delightful, Colorful and hot And afterwards My brother had removed his belt Because he was full Of anger. He had slipped On the broken glass and red wine While dodging the flying forks and plates With exemplary agility As his wife cursed his name. My own had fled into the kitchen And I admired the flowers on the tablecloth. I had seen it all before I told my wife In the car as we drove home. Like when his wife had left him on the side of Route 4 Thumbing for rides from logging trucks Because he had looked too long at a girl in a passing car. Or when she had forgotten to press his suit For a christening party. Or when his bachelor party was mentioned As having occurred. Later on They would kiss their fat lips And cradle bruises in their hands. They loved each other so much It made them hate one another. She didn’t understand it As I held her cheek in my hand I didn’t either. “What about the owl?” she asked. IV Funny thing about the birds In the raptor sanctuary, They always huddled together Wing to wing On the wooden perches As the people walked by their cages Two by two. The owls, the hawks the eagles. What got to me most Where the vultures. Fat, bald and black Hunched necks and alert eyes. They sat together But even more, Wild vultures had joined them Resting on the cage tops Quiet and patient and content just to be together. We think of vultures as repulsive But they love each other And depend on each other Every year They have two babies They nurture and raise An attendant tells me As he throws in a dead fish. The vultures flock to it And eat by nipping at it But never once harm another. “What about the owl?” He tells me she was pregnant She couldn’t lay the eggs She died. V Later that night I drag the garbage to the curb Where the owl had stood And light a smoke. My wife is sleeping My cat is killing. My brother and his wife are tending To their wounds. From in the tree above me Drifted a low and long call. It was desolate Weak and wavering. Somewhere high above In the shadowy boughs Of a winter humbled tree A forsaken owl sits alone. It knows only that its mate is gone And continues its call. I flick my cigarette. At that moment All that I want Is to hold my wife’s face in my hands. |