


This is the moment when you see again
the red berries of the mountain ash
and in the dark sky
the birds’ night migrations.
It grieves me to think
the dead won’t see them—
these things we depend on,
they disappear.
What will the soul do for solace then?
I tell myself maybe it won’t need
these pleasures anymore;
maybe just not being is simply enough,
hard as that is to imagine.
~Louise Glück “The Night Migrations”
(Louise Glück died yesterday at age 80; she was both a Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry)


All through August and September
thousands, maybe
tens of thousands, of feathered
creatures pass through
this place and I almost never see
a single one. The fall
wood warbler migration goes by here
every year, all of them,
myriad species, all looking sort of like
each other, yellow, brown, gray,
all muted versions of their summer selves,
almost indistinguishable
from each other, at least to me, although
definitely not to each other,
all flying by, mostly at night, calling to each
other as they go to keep
the flock together, saying: chip, zeet,
buzz, smack, zip, squeak—
those
sounds reassuring that we are
all here together and
heading south, all of us just passing
through, just passing
through, just passing through, just
passing through.
~David Budbill “Invisible Visitors” from Tumbling Toward the End


Some feathered travelers slip past us unseen and unheard.
They may stop for a drink in the pond
or a bite to eat in the field and woods,
but we never know they are there – simply passing through.
Others are compelled to announce their journey
with great fanfare, usually heard before seen.
The drama of migration becomes bantering conversation
from bird to bird, bird to earth, bird to sun, moon and stars,
with unseen magnetic forces pointing the way.
When not using voices, their wings sing the air
with rhythmic beat and whoosh.
We’re all together here — altogether —
even when our voices are raised sharply,
our silences brooding, our hurts magnified, our sorrows deep.
Our route and mode of travel become a matter of intense debate.
The ultimate destination is not in dispute however.
It isn’t simply enough to just be,
but to be heading to where we belong,
to that which we depend upon.
We are migrating souls finding a way back home
where all is solace, all is meaning,
all is grace, all is peace.
We’re just passing through,
just passing through, just passing through.



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What Louise Glück wrote was very beautiful, but very sad. I pray that she did come to know Christ as her Savior, and knew that in Him, that there is eternal, glorious life!
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