Christmas Crow

A bird is trapped in my house, a crow,
            a starling. I do not know birds.

And he keeps battering himself
            against the windows. Then, like any bird

in a poem or song, he sings. I want to keep him
            here, until Christmas, when I bring in the tree.

Then he will feel more at home, a pine
            or fir tree in the living room. I do not know trees.

As he hovers over the nativity, I will play him a blessing
            on the piano where he has been leaving

his shit for a month, and we will all sing to him:
            “Brich an, o schönes Morgenlicht.”

How could a bird not love Bach in German?
            All the birds like Bach, I’m assured, by other birds.

How much will he love me when, on Epiphany Sunday,
            I set him free, and like a carol, a hymn, a curse

he rises in the clipped cold and flies
             his bright shadow across the January snow?

David Wright

David Wright

David Wright's most recent poetry collection is Local Talent (Purple Flag/Virtual Artists Collective, 2019). Over the years, his poems have appeared in 32 Poems, Image, Spoon River Poetry Review, and