THE SPARROW HATH FOUND A HOUSE
Once – how final and nostalgic that word sounds –
each year we had starlings nesting in the eaves,
and small flocks of sparrows twittering
in the bushes. Though the fluting wood pigeons,
the bel canto blackbirds, the clever robins
and the subtle wrens kept faith, one year
the starlings did not return, and the sparrows,
except for the odd passer-by, vanished.
This year the prodigal sparrows have begun
to return – a couple of pairs nesting
in the ivy. They and their offspring
peck nervously at the feeders hanging
from a dead branch of the aging plum tree.
At this year’s end I shall be eighty four.
And at my back I sometimes hear the absence
of the starlings, the skittering of Death’s
nimble feet, and the sound of soft laughter.
***
If there were reincarnation I would wish
to return as a sparrow in a five star
hotel with Mediterranean airs;
with palms and olives and weeping figs,
bougainvillea and oleander;
where other birds are focussed on menace
like the hooded crow or stateliness
like the purple herons flying west
or just singing like the gold finches;
where the cat who has made the restaurants
its fiefdom is plump and insouciant,
and sleeps on cushions in the piano bar,
and the other cats prowl ostentatiously
among undergrowth on the margins of the grounds;
to be there preferably in the mid
and high seasons when guests, eating al fresco,
are careless with baklava and feta,
and broadcast sunflower seeds on balconies;
to enjoy the boisterous camaraderie
of meal times and the solitary quietness
as night falls; to hop and to fly as if
the whole world were ours.