Sunday, July 31, 2005

grey


It's early evening on a gloomy English summer day: heavy overcast, the hint of rain.

On the roof ridge opposite, a pair of wood pigeons are grooming themselves. Periodically they stop and look around, seeming lost. In my anthropomorphic oversensitivity, I imagine I know why: when I parked the car this morning after driving back from my parents' place, I unloaded my pile of stuff from the boot and, hands and arms full, started walking towards my front door. I noticed a grey mass of feathers in the road and thought, "ah, squashed wood pigeon' - it was too small to be a whole live bird. Then it moved.

I looked a bit closer: it was an unfledged youngster, with blood on its back and some small feathers scattered around it. I took all that in in mid-stride, saw its slow-blinking eye (or maybe imagined that bit). All the way to my front door, I was rationalising to myself that there was nothing I could do to help it, so I might as well just go in and forget about it. As I opened the door, I had a vision of a car backing out of the drive and over it, or of a cat coming and finishing it off.

So I had to go back, didn't I?

It was pathetic and feeble there on the damp tarmac: wings only half formed, clawed feet clenched tight, its body expanding and contracting with laboured breathing. As I stooped over it, it registered my presence and made a strange gasping noise, paddling its legs in an attempt to get away. It opened its beak wide, and I could see that there was blood there, too.

Horrible.

I picked it up, gingerly, not wanting to frighten or hurt it. I could feel the softness of its feathers against my fleshy palms, and its ribs and wing bones. As ever, I felt that sense of the bird's heart palpitating, not sure if it was really my own. I could see the wide-open beak, the extended tongue, the frightened-looking eye, the bloody back and feeble wings. The legs stretched and tensed..

I put it in the undergrowth under someone's hedge. It tried to drag itself into the shadows.

I felt rotten. What a horrible way to start the day.

The adult birds are resting on the roof ridge now. I must stop anthropomorphising.

3 comments:

red one said...

I grew up with a cat. It hardens you up about dead/wounded birds, believe me. But it must have been horrid.

Even the waether is doing that thing the bigoted English teacher used to call "pathetic fallacy".

If this cheers you up at all, there is a pun to be made on this phrase, involving the word "phallus" - a pun which as a 12 year old I did not neglect to make.

RedOne

Andy said...

"bigoted English teacher" ? Did you tell me about that before?

I'm still doing willy/bum jokes at 43: they never lose their resonance (unless J. Davidson does them). If it was good enough for Shakespeare, it's good enough for me.

Bottom. I rest my case.

Andy said...

Don't knock it. Oo-er.