The Sound of Birds at Noon
by Dahlia Ravikovitch
from Contemporary World Poetry, ©1996
translated from the Hebrew by Chana Bloch and Ariel Bloch
This chirping
is not the least malicious.
They sing without giving us a thought
and they are as many
as the seed of Abraham.
They have a life of their own,
they fly without thinking.
Some are rare, some are common,
but every wing is grace.
Their hearts aren’t heavy
even when the peck at a worm.
Perhaps they’re light-headed.
The heavens were given to them
to rule over day and night
and when they touch a branch,
the branch is theirs.
This chirping is entirely free of malice.
Over the years
it even seems to have
a note of compassion.
(via 3 Quarks Daily)
Friday, June 18, 2021
a note of compassion
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...the compassion can sometimes be the pity of the lack of appreciation for the gift of being...
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