
SPRING, BIRD SONGS, AND ETERNAL STIRRINGS
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TIME TO LOOK FOR LARKS As hinted at, perhaps, in previous articles, Spring is for me a pivotal season, because it speaks to me of so many things; linked to my understanding my own identity. Harking back to the days when my dad helped me celebrate my March 21st birthday by taking me out to listen for the first meadowlarks and to try to whistle them into conversation. And the arrival of the vernal equinox has always recharged my soul with new hopes and possibilities. And it's given me new reasons celebrate as Nature orchestrates its greatest miracle; region-wide resurrection. Now Chaucer's “younge sonne” just tickles the nose of The Ram, as Easter's joyous Son Rise glistens near." But now that I'm 82, I've made some changes to the way I “Welcome Sweet Springtime.” I don't have the barn and cow-pasture I had when I was seven and larks and killdeers piped from every quarter of the pasture and flocks of blackbirds decorated the naked cottonwoods with startling black and red ornaments making them no longer “bare naked choirs”, but singing Christmas trees. Modern farming has turned most area pastures into plowed fields with not a fence-post anywhere for a respectable lark to sing from. And the few old-style hay barns still standing are slumping to their knees like gut-shot elephants. These sobering realities call for desperate measures—especially for young guys like me whose strides have turned to totters or even teeters. No titters please. So what can I do to re-capture those “Golden days in the sunshine of my happy youth, Golden days, full of innocence and full of truth”? Well luckily, I have my reliable Honda Fit. It's roomy enough to accommodate both me and several fishing rods plus bait and tackle buckets, my binoculars and three genres of jackets chosen to fit the caprices of March weather. And I never forget my genuine L.L. Bean super “twin-beaver” all-season boots and a cooler full of survival sustenance in case of a spring blizzard. Oh yes and CD's: Eva Cassidy's “Song Bird” , Rosemary Cloony's “It might as well be Spring.” and Vivaldi's “Four Seasons: Spring And Nat Cole's “Nature Boy.” and recorded Psalms. Now an old Omar Khayyam poem begins to play across my mind: “Come, take the
cup, and in the fire of Spring MEADOWLARKIN'
Gonna go out meadow larkin' If I
wasn't tone deaf I'd put some country music to that song, but maybe I
could expand the meaning of meadow larking a bit for the non bird
watchers: Gene Pinkney 3/18/ 20 For the Daily News
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