![]() Sooo . . . this was not the poem I thought I was going to borrow from my collection when I saw "February" and thought Valentine's Day and love--and typed the title "Love is in the air." Though, that does feel even more poetic as I imagine birds in flight. I planned to post a poem I wrote about my husband before he was even so much as my boyfriend. But--as life would have it--I clicked on the first poem in my folder: "A Mother's Vigil" and read it. It's a poem I wrote specifically for my first long project, my young adult novel: Lucy Bound in Lyrics. So much love is wrapped up in motherhood. Some is pure and simple. Some, complicated and frustrating. But, all of it originates from the right place, even if that's not always where it seems to end up. This is a poem that has the ability to make your head hurt trying to sort through the various shades of love, but love refuses to present itself in one, predictable, solid color. As far as mothers go, Robins are some of the most impressive! This poem was inspired by a true story as it played out beyond and framed by my kitchen window in my back yard. A Robin stood vigil over her injured hatchling all day and beyond dusk. I worried about her, as well as her other babies still in the nest in the tree outside our dining room window. Love can be so tragic and yet beautiful. Here's to all the moms. ![]() A Mother’s Vigil Among the twigs and discarded twine four Tiffany-blue eggs lay, too humble to shine. Mama bird sits protecting her nest from the chill of the north, the scorch of the west. Warming, padding, tending her hatchlings feeding when hungry, when lonely—she sings. Each day the necks stretch, they feed and they grow. Four birds take to flight, but one meets a fierce foe. Chirping and trembling, knocked from the sky, Mama tends the fallen while her other babes fly. Vulnerable, heartbroken—a guard at her post, Keeping sorry vigil by the bird who needs her most. While the other birds soar, swooping strong and free The injured bird lay suffering-- in the dirt beneath the tree. |
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