whose home is in the straw
and bailing twine threaded
in the slots of a roof vent
who guards a tiny ledge
against the starlings
that cruise the neighborhood
whose heart is smaller
than a heart should be,
whose feathers stiffen
like an arrow fret to quicken
the hydraulics of its wings,
stay there on the metal
ledge, widen your alarming
beak, but do not flee as others have
to the black walnut vaulting
overhead. Do not move outside
the world you’ve made
from bailing twine and straw.
The isolated starling fears
the crows, the crows gang up
to rout a hawk. The hawk
is cold. And cold is what
a larger heart maintains.
The owl at dusk and dawn,
far off, unseen, but audible,
repeats its syncopated intervals,
a song that’s not a cry
but a whisper rising from concentric
rings of water spreading out across
the surface of a catchment pond.
It asks, “Who are you? Who
are you?” but no one knows.
Stay where you are, nervous, jittery.
Move your small head a hundred
ways, a hundred times, keep
paying attention to the terrifying
world. And if you see the Robins
in their dirty orange vests
patrolling the yard like thugs,
forget about the worm. Starve
yourself, or from the air inhale
the water you may need, digest
the dust. And what the promiscuous
cat and jaybirds do, let them
do it, let them dart and snipe,
let them sound like others.
They sleep when the owl sends
out its encircling question.
Stay where you are, you lit fuse,
you dull spark of saltpeter and sulfur.