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Replying to a comment on:
Songs of the hedge bird (Free verse) by ALChemy
Before the morning symphony
when you hear sounds of tuning crickets,
of warbling wind and humming bees,
while fluttering in the thickets
a chirp, a whistle, a rustling of feathers
bring the branches of the briar
bustling about hither and dither
as the birds prepare their choir.
In a lonely cottage on a dewy meadow
next to a window stood a cage.
In its bamboo bars a small bright yellow
Parakeet with breast of sage
proudly perched on man made branch
staring through the window frame
at all the life along the ranch
listening to the sounds that came.
But one sound, one song, one soothing voice
soared through the throng and caught his ear.
She sang so lovely that heâd rejoice
each morning when her voice appeared
and brought him tales of far off lands,
hide and seek games in the cumuli,
of traveling across the ocean spans
and a heaven that awaits in the sky.
Each day the song bird in the hedge
sang to him his hopes and dreams
and he knew just past the window ledge,
beyond these narrow bamboo beams
was a place where life was merry,
where he could make his family,
where the heavens were his aviary
and his home was a tall safe tree.
But the cage gate still remained closed
and his once pretty wings had been clipped
With each day he felt more like a ghost
and each night his lonely heart wept
for he knew he could never be freed.
His lot in life had already been chose.
Though he dreamt someday heâd succeed
the cage gate still remained closed.
Still each morning the song bird
she sang to him, songs of life and love
and with each lovely note that he heard
he knew her voice would be enough
to bring him the joys of lands far away,
of games in the clouds and trips across seas,
of watching your children laugh and play
and holding your lover warm in the breeze.
She sang to him one last song
on the last lonely day of his life.
She brought dreams that lasted as long
as forever and in them were a wife
and children and friends by his side,
a bright blue sky where he could roam free,
his once clipped wings now full and wide
and with each morning came a symphony
But before the morning symphony
there comes sounds of tuning crickets,
the warbling wind, the humming bees
and somewhere in the thickets
a chirp, a whistle, a rustling of feathers
bustling the branches of the briar
jittering about hither and dither
as the little yellow bird joins the choir.
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