
Courtesy of U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Name a song further away than that.
Green-throated Carib,
Crested Honeykeeper.
I’m sitting in the post office parking lot
listening to the back-up beep
of a mail truck, this sheet
of sunstruck stamps in my lap:
islands for little rare things,
poised on their typical branches.
Look, says the postal service,
what sings in the world!
Sang? Music I didn’t know
existed, maybe already gone?
Is that why this Euphonia
turns his dark back toward me,
already intent on the silence
he’d hoped to fill with himself?
Does he perch anywhere
besides this white duchy,
a kingdom with no anthem?
Go ahead, share his little branch,
the quiet ahead of us
tuneless and long. But not really:
quick blast of car radio,
somebody’s ringtone, sirens, shouting.
It’s the page that’s silent,
the bright birds’ tiny page.