Heron
On a dead log
In the shade of the sun
Near the stale green water
The blue heron
waits
Still like a statue
but with an imperceptible shift of its eye
so that we know he knows we’re here
A turtle disappears into the algae
Dry dead leaves race each other past me to the water
The dead tree branches reach, fingerlike, from the pond towards the sky
They are the hands of a drowning man sinking
Glacier-slowly and unstoppably
Second by second down past the reeds,
The ivy vines, the dandelions, the leaved trees slipping into dotage
into the green water pond
The trees here are dying.
Their leaves turn golden brown from pasty green
And curl at the edges and grow holes.
One disconnects from its branch at a blast of wind
And flutters to rest, an upside-down umbrella on the surface of the pond,
Where pitter-patter drops begin to plink the surface.
It smells of algae and wet
The heron
bluegray feathered
spindle legs
reaching neck
with a bean-shaped torso
a black stripe on his head
The heron
tilts his head on his spindle neck and twitches a needle leg.
Thunder groans,
A train screeches and blares its way
Past his left. He blinks,
And energy flows in a wave through his body from
His feet to his neck to the horizontal black stripe on his head as
He readies himself for flight.
With a cackling honk that reverberates over the pond water,
His feet push the dead log, leaving little ripples in the vibrating pond behind him.
He opens his bean body to reveal an impressive wingspan
Aligns his body in a diagonal arrow
And is gone, swooping over the pond to another
Dead tree branch
Pointing its finger to the heavens
In mute accusation
Or hope of rescue.