REQUEIUM FOR A FALLEN WREN
My carpenter friend meant well
when he showed up at the door
one day with a huge picture window
in the back of his truck, offering
to replace our well worn windows,
withered and splintered from a century
of sun, wind and hail with sagging
frames and drooping lead weights.
“Nothing to it,” he assured us, vowing to
bring the outside inside, unaware that
we loved the charm of those crooked
old windows, sills parched for paint
whose hand-blown panes had bubbles
that magnified the light of the sun and stars.
Now, lying dormant on our deck after
slamming into our picture window
splattered with carrion insects is a tiny wren
who will sing no more. Its vocal repertoire
once rejoiced and now will no longer echo
across Saranac Lake. Its streaked brown-grey
plumage is crumpled, a slender bill at rest
like a sword no longer drawn. Maybe its older
than it looks and misty cataracts clouded vision that
otherwise would have seen glass is not empty space
but hard and cold, no different than banging your head
against a stone wall.
We’ll treat it like a fallen angel, reciting
all our Gnostic prayers before burying it
in the back yard along with our beloved
calico cat and weimaraner. Returning
to earth its soul will sing, delicate bones
will merge into fecund soil sure to grow
the reddest floribunda this side of the Erie Canal.
Milton P. Ehrlich