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Death of The Bird

Posted on Jan 8th, 2009 by Fearless : Grace Serene Fearless
Redneckstint
WHEN I WAS BACK IN STREAKY BAY, I'm not sure whether I mentioned the red-necked stints that I saw on the rocks there one day.
They flew as one, a battalion - tiny, tiny little birds.  I learnt this morning that they weigh only 30 grams (about as big as a hen's egg) and fly 12,000 kms to Australia on their annual migration.
My thoughts turned to these delicate little creatures when I heard this poem by Alec Hope on the radio this morning:

Death of the Bird by Alec Derwent Hope
For every bird there is this last migration;
Once more the cooling year kindles her heart;
With a warm passage to the summer station
Love pricks the course in lights across the chart.

Year after year a speck on the map, divided
By a whole hemisphere, summons her to come;
Season after season, sure and safely guided,
Going away she is also coming home.

And being home, memory becomes a passion
With which she feeds her brood and straws her nest,
Aware of ghosts that haunt the heart's possession
And exiled love mourning within the breast.

The sands are green with a mirage of valleys;
The palm tree casts a shadow not its own;
Down the long architrave of temple or palace
Blows a cool air from moorland scarps of stone.

And day by day the whisper of love grows stronger;
That delicate voice, more urgent with despair,
Custom and fear constraining her no longer,
Drives her at last on the waste leagues of air.

A vanishing speck in those inane dominions,
Single and frail, uncertain of her place,
Alone in the bright host of her companions,
Lost in the blue unfriendliness of space.

She feels it close now, the appointed season;
The invisible thread is broken as she flies;
Suddenly, without warning, without reason,
The guiding spark of instinct winks and dies.

Try as she will, the trackless world delivers
No way, the wilderness of light no sign;
Immense,complex contours of hills and rivers
Mock her small wisdom with their vast design.

The darkness rises from the eastern valleys,
And the winds buffet her with their hungry breath,
And the great earth, with neither grief nor malice,
Receives the tiny burden of her death.
Perhaps I've become too maudlin, but I feel that I have come through a kind of death - the loss of an illusion.
And my tiny little bird has fallen to the ground.


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