A blue jay perched on a wooden fence, looking back at the camera.

My blue jay friends are back, tap-dancing on my balcony to get my attention, peering accusingly through the living room windows until I get up to fetch the peanut dish. There are many, many more blue jay poems in my future. Here’s one from the past. (This post first appeared in March of 2022).


Many of my poems are not autobiographical, but this one is. I can still remember that moment: the early-morning air, the flash of blue. The pang I felt.

In the intervening years I’ve gotten to know blue jays much better as a species and as individuals. I’ve spent endless hours reading about them, watching them, talking to them, and listening. I’ve studied an audio glossary of jay calls and songs in the vain hopes of learning to understand at least a little of their language. Still, the birds of this poem have their own private, gleaming little niche in my memory, vivid and tender as a bruise.


Right Then

Ransacking the grass
at the edge of the parking lot,
the loveliest jay
I’ve ever seen.

His features,
so fine. His blues,
so bright.

He cocks his crest
at my idling car
:

I sigh behind the wheel.

He screams.
Another bird flutters down.

She is smaller than her mate,
her neck feathers
mute and iridescent
as shade-grown violets.

Two hops and he is gone
into the brambles. She follows
:

Right then.
That’s when I miss you.

*

Image via Unsplash. A version of this poem originally appeared in Passionfruit.

End