Quotidian Thoughts

The setting sun is reflected from the windows of the almshouse as brightly as from the rich man's abode; the snow melts before its door as early in the spring.
~ Henry Thoreau

Monday, February 16, 2015

The Jackdaws

      It was in the first of March, when winter had begun her annual retreat, that the Adairs discovered that the pair of jackdaws that regularly rapped their window for sundry bits of leftovers, had gone. The jackdaws, a jealously devoted pair, had constructed a small nest in the grand oak a little ways from the Adair house several years ago, and it was not rare to see one or the other strutting imperiously along the window sill, the sun glinting off its iridescent wings.

      This clear morning, however, as Etty Adair peered out of the window, half of a fresh roll in one hand, she found that the nest was empty of inhabitants. All that remained were several scattered feathers and bits of straw and tattered rags; it was a most depressing sight, particularly when she'd only just been discussing the possibility of chicks that spring with her husband.

     "Bernard?" She called, still leaning out of the kitchen window. Bernard, who was muttering inaudibly to himself over the morning paper and taking intermittent sips of his tea, glanced up irritatedly.

     "What is it, dear?"

    "I don't see the jackdaws in their nest - and you know that the male always comes for his roll. He," at this she sniffed, "seems to enjoy them well, unlike a certain someone who always persists in breakfasting on buttered toast."

Bernard, ignoring her palavering, stood, folded his paper twice and laid it on the table, then joined her by the window side. He stood scrutinizing the barren nest before taking his cane, which was hung on a knob beside the door, and making his way out to the garden. As he approached the tree, the slanting sunlight struck something black that lay palpitating on the ground. Alarmed, the dark haired man knelt down, fearing the worst.

There, in a small patch of moss, was the jackdaw couple, the male, who was a handsome sable, tenderly grooming the feathers of the trembling female, the chest of whom bore a vermilion gash, pulsating and clotted with blood. It cannot be said that Bernard was at all a feeling fellow, for the war of '45 had immured him, but at the sight of the injured female, who lay rasping on the cold earth, and her impotent mate, brought to his throat a choking sensation.

     With a gentle hand, he lifted the prostrate creature from where she lay and sat stroking her dulled plumage. He found that his eyes had clouded over his a wet, stinging substance – tears. Bernard could not understand it, could not understand why these wracking sobs afflicted his body now, when he'd not even wept since that nightmarish day half a decade past. He'd returned from the war a cynic, a caustic veteran who'd sit dry-eyed through the most lachrymose scenes.
    
     And then, as he clutched that barely living being in his hands, he recalled that crisp, wintry morning. No breeze that day – the pale sun piercing his eyes when it reflected off the sheet of brittle snow that blanketed the field. No sounds either, no birdsong nor brotherly camaraderie at the base. Silence. Because who was there but he left? Bernard had stumbled feverishly out of the base, repulsed by his inability to join them – wherever they had gone. A brother, a childhood neighbor, a cousin. All gone – still – their lips parted but devoid of breath.

     He'd wandered out of the ruination that was their base, gazing dazedly at all that remained from the air bombing, then turned and trudged into the frosty woods, seeking sanity in nature. Nothing stirred, for all that he saw was trees – hoary gray in their winter nudity, their branches laden with fresh snow. But then, as he sank ashen into the snow, a jackdaw sprang from a branch onto the snow, and croaking softly, came bounding over.
      
     At that moment, Bernard despised that bird – despised him for seeming so merry when he, too, was separated from his flock. What right had he? Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they? He ruminated over that verse as he stood there, unconsciously grappling the handle of his rifle. A brief, baleful bark of a laugh rang from his throat, “And what of these men? Are they not better than this fowl?”

     Now, as Bernard kneeled in the receding snow, his eyes clenched shut, he murmured inaudibly, “But I did not kill that bird. No. I let him live.” He'd not had the heart then to do it, for there was no use. The travesty of war, for a travesty it was, needn't enlist the innocent, mute beasts that had no part in its making.

Moments later, Etty discovered Bernard sitting alone on the stone bench by the oak, gazing wistfully at the sky. The jackdaws had left.

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Welcome!

I've decided to venture into this curious world of recording my thoughts and eclectic activities here, in hopes that I might share some of my works and notions on a greater scale than my journal. Mayhaps no one shall view these posts and pages, but all the same, I'm pleased to have a little 'nook' of my own to settle into.

Blaireau