Littlefoot, 19, (This Is The Bird Hour) Poem by Charles Wright

Littlefoot, 19, (This Is The Bird Hour)



19

This is the bird hour, peony blossoms falling bigger than wren hearts
On the cutting border's railroad ties,
Sparrows and other feathery things
Homing from one hedge to the next,
late May, gnat-floating evening.

Is love stronger than unlove?
Only the unloved know.
And the mockingbird, whose heart is cloned and colorless.

And who's this tiny chirper,
lost in the loose leaves of the weeping cherry tree?
His song is not more than three feet off the ground, and singular,
And going nowhere.
Listen. It sounds a lot like you, hermane.
It sounds like me.

Thursday, May 21, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: birds
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Charles Wright

Charles Wright

Pickwick Dam, Tennessee
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