THE DARK NIGHT OF THE HUMMINGBIRD

A lot of hummingbirds die in their sleep,

dreaming of nectar-sweet funnels they sipped.

Moth-light, they swiveled at succulent

blooms, all flash and ripple—like sunset,

but delicate, probing, excitable,

their wings a soft fury of iridescence,

their hearts beating like a tiny drumroll

fourteen hundred times a minute,

their W-shaped tongues, drawing nectar

down each groove, whispering: wheels within wheels.

By day, hovering hard, they fly nowhere

at speed, swilling energy. But to refuel,

they must eat, and to eat they must hover,

burning more air than a sprinting impala.

So, in the dark night of the hummingbird,

while lilies lather sweetly in the rain,

the hummingbird rests near collapse,

its quick pulse halved, its rugged breath shallow,

its W-shaped tongue, & bright as Cassiopeia,

now mumbling words like wistful and wan.

The world at once drug, anthem, bright lagoon,

where its heart knew all the Morse codes

for rapture, pales into a senseless twilight.

It can’t store enough fuel to last the night

and hoist it from its well of dreams

to first light trembling on wet fuchsia,

nor break the hard promise life always keeps.

A lot of hummingbirds die in their sleep.