Mr. and Mrs. Bird
(For the want of any names, lets just keep it simple
silly)
Mr. B kept on shouting hurry up, we need to be back
before dark .You don’t know how difficult it is to make one’s way back in the
airway as it gets so dark and the for and the twilight witching hour mixed with
the commotion of the lights which confuse us heading back home to
themulti-storeyes green patch in the urban jungle.
I wonder, as always how do they know where to go and
sleep. Is it a homing device, they all come fitted in? I watch them during my
walk they are like poetry in motion, a flight of coming home to roost. The
chirp, the caw the tweet of the birds all comes together as melody to my ears,
but for one Mr. and Mrs. B who always come in late. They circle, swoop the
skies as if they are the monitors of the whole flock, waiting, counting the
numbers making sure all of them are in there. Mr. B looks at me as if I am the
crazy intruder living un-glamorously in a cemented house with no air to breathe
in. Its pity I see in his eyes, and sometimes a smile, as if he understands.
Mrs. B always sits on the railing of the first floor
looking, waiting for the stray last bird to come in and take place. She makes
the final flight before joining her husband for the last sip from the feeder. I
think she might be like me, one who needs constant water. I tell you, my
constant fear is finding myself without water. It is like fanaa for the soul.
Mr and Mrs B conveniently allow us to live with them,
condescending us to live them to imbibe the happiness, the mindless chatter and
the constant tweeting. I wish humans
would learn form them , no wars over a strip of land, no discrimination over
caste creed, no senseless killing over sex and yes equal opportunity to study
unlike the country next door.
Mr. and Mrs. B and generations before can teach us so
much more; even more than the world famous limiting 140 word tweet !
I want to intrude into their heaven, to understand the
gabble, the hierarchy games played, where why do some birds go first and some
go last. I wish I’d know the secret of how they all just get silent t, pin drop,
it’s as if someone takes a feather and lights out. Our garden a haven of these
millions of birds is not a figment of my imagination, but an oasis, a rarity in
this fast vanishing jungle. All I would like is to have is a conversation with
these avian friends of mine, Chand sifarsh maybe. The one eyed crow, the bird
with a twisted foot, the brown bird with one wing and the white owl who decides
when he wants to grace us with his presence.
The Aunt Lucy (common pheasant) who roams the gardens
as if she owns ‘em with her trio behind her. I think she has a hen-pecked
husband who follows her lost in love and her magic. Was that an oxymoron, I
don’t know? All I wish is a window into their chatter where they discuss the
world at large, the village in general and they dying rays of the sun painting
the world red and the strange two legged person who stops, stares and walks
with two twigs in her ears.
No comments:
Post a Comment