Stone Bird
by Pattiann Rogers I remember you. You‘re the one who lifted your ancient bones of fossil rock, pulled yourself free of the strata like a plaster figure rising from its own mold, became flesh and feather, took wing, arrested the sky. You‘re the one who, though marble, floated as beautifully as a white blossom on the pond all summer, who, though skeletal and particled like winter, glimmered as solid as a bird of cut crystal in the icy trees. You are redbird—sandstone wings and agate eyes—at dusk. You are greybird—polished granite and pearl eyes—just before dawn, midnight bird with a reflective vacancy of heart like a mirror of pure obsidian. You‘re the one who flew down to that river from the heavens, as if your form alone were the only holy message needed. You were alabaster then in the noonday sun. Once I saw you rise without rising from your prison pedestal in the garden beneath the lime tree. At that moment your ghost in its haunting permeated every regality of the forest with light, reigned with disdain in thin air above the mountain, sank in union with the crosswinds of the sea. I remember you. You‘re the one who entered in through my death as if it were an open window and you were the sound of the serenade being sung outside for me, the words of which, I know now, are of freedom cast in stone forever. |