We are sitting in a slate-roofed brick-built bower
in the ornamental gardens of our
favourite country house. A robin appears
on the flags at our feet. It cocks its head,
so as to better see us with its brown eye.
The three of us wait. Perhaps it has come
for crumbs. It hops under the bench – then flies off,
only to return almost immediately,
and resume its original position.
How fragile its legs seem, thinner than matchsticks,
snappable as twigs. It goes under the bench,
flies off again – and returns. This time
it hops up, and stands within a foot of my coat.
Its red breast close up and out of direct light
is a warm orange. It shats on the green bench.
Its excrement is whiter than snow on grass.
The three of us wait. It flies away,
and does not return. We have been warned.
ErddigErithacus rubecularobins
HARVEY LILLYWHITE
December 15, 2023I love the robins and this parable. Around here they’re skittish and won’t suffer humans to come close.