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Life Goes On
The birds do not sing for us,
but to each other. Melodic notes
fall from the treetops
to the forest floor below,
where the mice fight the ants
for the seeds the branches scatter.
The wren’s song peals through
the twigs and the twine alike, but
they cannot carry her voice to a partner who cares.
It is the beginning of October;
the birds have fled down the coast,
and there is no one for her.
But the leaves did carry her desperate plea
to some inviting ear; a child
tying her shoelaces on the front doorstep
hears her tune. It does not pass over her small head
like it does with the mice.
The children hear the wren’s cry for companionship,
and they know that life goes on.
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This piece is part of a portfolio of works on loneliness and isolation. It is the first work in the project and features many images used frequently throughout the piece. Songbirds symbolize the two main characters in my story, Birds in Treetops, which captures the solitude of a bird whose song is never listened to.