Today's poem is by Pascale Petit
The Hummingbird Nest
I bring you a hummingbird's nest, woven
from seed-down, thistle head,bound with lichen and spidersilk,
shaped by a mother who presses her breastagainst the cup, uses her rump, chin,
the curve of her wing, who stompsher claws on the base to check it's
windproof under this leaf porch.The male gone, she works alone,
hurrying back and forth thirty timesan hour, before the eggs come.
She lays them in a home small as a nutshell,the rim turned in, the sides pliant
so they'll stretch as the chicks grow.Little mother, I've read your file
filled with letters to the mairie, beggingfor a place where we could live together.
I know now how hard you fought the powers,like a jewelled dart stabbing at their door,
before you fell prey to the jungle mantis.Instead of flowers, I leave you this nest
on your grave, in case you make itfrom your migration only a wisp
of feathers, no flesh left on your bones.
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Copyright © 2018 Pascale Petit All rights reserved
from Mama Amazonica
Bloodaxe Books
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission
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