WILD BIRDS

The wild birds among the reeds

Cry, exult and stretch their wings.

Out of the sky they drift

And sink to the water's rushes.

But the wild birds beat their wings and cry

To the newcomer out of the sky!

Is he a stranger, this wild bird out of the sky?

Or do they cry to him because of remembered places

And remembered days

Spent together

In the north-land, or the south-land?

Is this the ecstasy of renewal,

Or the ecstasy of beginning?

For the wild bird touches his bill

Against a mate;

He brushes her wing with his wing;

He quivers with delight

For the cool sky of blue,

And the touch of her wing!

The wild birds fly up from the reeds of the water,

Some for the south,

Some for the north.

They are gone—

Lost in the sky!

In what water do these mates of a morning

Exult on the morrow?

What wild birds will cry to them as they sink

Out of an unknown sky?

To whose cry will she quiver

Through her burnished wings to-morrow,

In the north-land,

In the south-land,

Far away?