OLD CROWS STILL MOVING
Two old crows with fossilized aquiline bodies
still swing and sway though the new penny luster
of younger days has long since tarnished and
faded away.
Elderly bones are dry and brittle, desiccated
tinder for a memorized spark that still rekindles
pleasures of the flesh.
They keep moving , work never ends.
If he sits he falls into a narcoleptic slumber.
In a resonant gravely voice he sings and plunks
“The Rim of Fire” on his electric guitar with
gnarled nicotine-stained fingers.
He splits and stacks firewood, catches clucking
pullets for the chopping block, taps maple trees
for syrup, extracts clover honey from buzzing
hives, clambers on the roof to clean the chimney
with a homemade brush and spindle and takes
careful aim at marauding crows pecking at the corn
She weeds the garden, harvests the seeds from a grove
of yellow sunflowers, trims the purple wisteria encircling
the house, milks their lone cow twice a day, bakes
bread and rolls, rhubarb-apple pie and banana bread.
She feeds the roaming menagerie of hens, pgs, goats,
sheep, kitty cats and mongrel dogs; hand scrubs
the laundry, preserves pickles, beets and beans, sings
contralto in the church choir and is the best designer
in her quilting group.
As wisps of smoke curl out of the roof they settle
down in front of the iron kitchen cook stove.
Aching joints and twitching muscles cry out
for the comforting touch that only one old crow’s
withered hands can provide for the other with
an attunement that speaks without words.
The corrosive caress of time knocks their balance
off kilter as one crow flies away leaving
the abandoned crow at a loss until instinct triggers
an eruption into flight following close behind.
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J.