LOST COCKATIEL, cried the sign, hand-lettered,
taped to the side of a building: last seen on 16th
between Fifth and Sixth, gray body, orange cheek patches,
yellow head. Name: Omar. Somebody’s dear, I guess,
though how do you lose a cockatiel on 16th Street?
Flown from a ledge, into the sky he’s eyed
for months or years, into the high limbs of the ginkgos,
suddenly free? I’m looking everywhere in the rustling
globes and spires shot through with yellow,
streaking at the edges, for any tropic flash of him. Why
should I think I’d see him, in the vast flap this city is?
Why wander Chelsea when that boy could be up and gone,
winging his way to Babylon or Oyster Bay,
drawn to some magnet of green. Sense to go south?
Not likely; Omar’s known the apartment and the cage,
picked his seeds from a cup, his fruits and nuts from the hand
that anchored him—and now, he’s launched, unfindable,
no one’s baby anymore but one bit…
Think of the great banks of wires and switches
in the telephone exchange, every voice and signal
a little flicker lighting up—that’s Omar now,
impulse in the propulsive flow. Who’ll ever know?
Then this morning we’re all in the private commuter blur
when a guy walks into the subway car whistling,
doing birdcalls; he’s decked in orange and lime,
a flag pluming his baseball cap; he’s holding out a paper cup
while he shifts from trills to caws. Not much of a talent,
I think, though I like his shameless attempt at charm,
and everybody’s smiling covertly, not particularly tempted
to give him money. Though one man reaches into his pocket
and starts to drop some change into the cup,
and our Papageno says, “That’s my coffee, man,
but thanks, God bless you anyway,”
and lurches whistling out the door.