Buzzards
Mornings, a buzzard works alone,
coroner of the county roads.
He works for the state;
he has the right of way.
At noon he stands
on the ruin of an elm,
wings spread wide, his neck
arched to the sun as if
he were the ornament
on a long black limousine.
The buzzard is inviting light
into his embrace, as lice
escape from his cloak.
Where two or three are gathered
on a thermal in the afternoon,
it's not for want of carrion.
It's just everything, everywhere,
cloying the air they soar
for pleasure, for the touch
of their shadows against the fields.
Their work is easy and can wait.
Buzzards sleep late,
huddled in their cloaks
in the branches of a locust—
a candelabrum lit with black flames.
When finally they blossom
onto the morning air,
the scrape of their wings in the branches
is the scent they leave.
DL