If mother nature takes away, it gives back as well. It wipes the slate clean and then ascertains that there are fresher lines drawn symbolizing resurrected tales. The bees are gone and the empty hive gives a pinching sense of alienation. But the hundreds of sparrows among the group of keekars just outside the yard wall keep it alive and buzzing. They are very chatty, suspenseful, always busy in their birdie gossip. When they change their notes, it makes them sound as if they possess multi-lingual creativity. They flit around during the day, with a kind of self-effacing candor, taking the major portion of their meals from the millet that I put on the wall.
A giloy creeper has completely covered the
clump of keekars. It has shed its
leaves during the winters but the network of stems is still dense enough to
provide a finely netted ceiling. It harkens the little brown sparrows with a
welcoming ambience. They find it safe enough to spend their nights here. The
little holes among the densely twisting barren stems of the creeper are like tiny
hutments flooded with winged visitors.
The
very next day, once the honeybees left, some of the sparrows arrived to roost
among the little group of small trees in the yard. As if they were waiting for
the bees to leave the garden. So the garden turns a big chiming birdie funfair
at dusk. They chat a lot before retiring for the day. But they are very
respectful to the night, not a movement, not a sound, paying homage to the
goddess of silence. They arrive ten or fifteen minutes before the oriental
magpie robin. The dashing fellow is still keeping to his perfectly timed
twilight arrival. His biological clock is in perfect sync with nature with the
days slightly longer presently. But he has to quarrel now to retain his paw-hold.
Some sparrows must be sitting on his favorite branch for the night rest. It
leaves him in a grumpy mood and so there he goes with his querulous notes. And
finding it to no effect, like a naughty imp he head-butted straight into the
bough and reclaimed his lost perch. He fights for it every day. Sometimes, in
the middle of a cold, lonely, long night, the magpie robin lets out a sudden
note as if all its bottled up pathos are suddenly let out to sail into the cold
atmospherics like a song of desolation and loneliness.
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