The birds of London are my friends,
Or I like to imagine that that’s the case,
But, I do not warmly greet pavement pigeons,
For fear they won’t reciprocate.
Yet when I proceed antlike, along
The floors of cold canyon streets
a single seagull riding the wind
can lift my heart with its white wings.
Even a black crow against grey cloud,
above a bleak bus garage
is a spark of life, which makes me look up,
from the rubbish and puddles around my feet.
When I drag a bag home up a suburban hill,
Along street like millions more,
Magpies rattle and hop around
Rooftops and trees above my head.
Behind my house I pay small birds with food
Hung in feeders from my garden tree,
They fly in for the food that I provide
And I love to believe that they’re visiting me
But the tree is not really mine,
nor the garden where it chose to grow
I have a paper which says I own
But it’s mad to say that land belongs to a man,
As mad as saying that birds are my friends
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