Grackles

They were not one body. Yet they seemed

held together by some order, their thick necks

flickering with a blue-black iridescence,

their yellow-circled pupils bright and cold.

In a wave of differences that passed

low over the surface of my yard,

they picked it clean of morning’s fritillaries

and other summer gestures fall discards

then settled on the hill behind the fence

for several teeming minutes to remark

its tapestry, each razored beak, each tail

parting Sunday’s gray air like a spear.

I could tell you that they gathered up

the darkness of my winter thought that day

in mid-September, bundled it, black-ribboned,

into sleek coats and lifted it from me

just as you have imagined. But this

would be a lie. I watched them comb the fields

with interest, and, when their beak’s clicks had died,

turned back to what I was.