This morning a single redbird
returned to the hemlock
and sang as if winter
had been nothing,
as if five months of silence
were simply the pause
a song requires
before it can mean something again.
🐦
I stopped and stood there.
The hill held its breath around it,
or perhaps I did.
That old confusion
of never knowing
where the world ends
and I begin.
🐦
Snow still lingered in hollers,
shining faintly under pale light,
and the hemlock needles
dripped from last night’s thaw,
tiny diamonds falling slowly
onto the brown, waiting earth.
🐦
I have missed things before
and thought the missing
would last forever.
I have stood in cold certainty
and called it truth,
watching shadows stretch
across the holler of my own thought.
🐦
The redbird paid no attention.
It sang the way spring always comes,
fully itself,
its song finding the hemlock
on a morning you almost
stayed inside,
filling the whole hill
with the fact of itself.
🐦
I felt something loosen inside me,
that cold, certain part
that holds tight to absence,
and watched it open
as the hill opened,
as snowdrops edged upward
through ice-dark soil,
as sunlight touched the bark
and the air itself seemed to breathe.
🐦
This is what returns do.
They disregard readiness.
They come back singing,
carrying pieces of all that has passed,
and something in you shifts,
expands, remembers
how it is to wait,
how it is to watch,
how it is to witness
the ordinary miracle
of life returning.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
I’m a firm believer life is messy, beautiful, and too short, which is why I write poems full of heart and humor. I am an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. My book Beautiful and Brutal Things is on Amazon, Link 👇



Comments (5)
Well-wrought! There are so many things here that speak to me, but most of all the image of the thawing ground as "snowdrops edged upward", as a metaphor for a suspended awareness which must inevitably be drawn by the light. Also am I a great lover of cardinals. Multiple generations have thrived in my backyard.
Ah, Tim, spring has sprung and the cardinal sings beautifully like your poem. We don’t have them here but our soaring Violet Greens are back for the summer!
Very nice flow and pleasing to my listening palette. Love all things Cardinal. You nailed this rendering.
Wonderful imagery Tim. I see that redbird in the hemlock. I hear it. You've been able to create a light, "springtime" feel in the poem, yet it also contains truth and power. Nice work.
I love how you speak through nature—this language that resonates deeply with me.