The heron dies.
The food sent to his stomach
abetted him no more.
His urine turned black.
But his face remained blue, his face
and its grizzled beard
agreed to be turned thus
by blue hands
to the standard of the sky.
Those whose flight is stolen from them
still have this. So did his daughter
witness, collecting the sheen of the
discarded food, the rupture
of his heart, where she folded
a ribcage or otherwise
make a bed for the body
he could settle into. This shoulder,
this wing, this odious
resignation.
elizabeth robinson