DIVINE PROPERTY LXXXVII: PIGEON
I am nothing more than a fat pigeon
Living in the waste of my own luxury
Not having earned or worked
For any crumb or nickel
As I move from one curb
To another. I am no longer my own
Advocate – just a scavenger of spoils.
My wings, silent and pale,
The things that make me
Me, are useless as I try
To lift but only suspend for a moment
And drop like a grey thing
Heavy and graceless to the ridicule
Of the sparrow and wren, dishonorable
To both humans and my rich heritage
As I scurry to pick up bread pieces
And corn kernels thrown toward me
in Harrowgate Park from aging men,
Flapping away the squirrels
for me and my welfare.
DIVINE PROPERTY LXXX: CHAOS AND CHANCE
I left order and the ideal of certainty
And stepped into chaos and chance,
Chance being an imagination all its own
And there is static and interference
From one valley to another but no
Conceit because there is consent
For redemption, vulnerability –
Like a divine fiat of some sort – while
I embrace an archangel who encouraged
Me to uproot a mulberry tree and
Plant it in a place of my own choosing
And with authority I did while waves
Crested and fell, crested and fell.
Bionote
Tim Gavin is an Episcopal priest, serving as head chaplain at The Episcopal Academy. Prolific Press Released his chapbook, Lyrics from the Central Plateau, in November 2018. He is currently developing a manuscript: Divine Property. His poems have appeared in The Anglican Theological Review, Blue Heron Review, Blue Mountain Review, Cape Rock, Cardinal Sins, Chiron Review, The Cresset, Digital Papercut, Evening Street Review, Magma, Poetry Quarterly, Poetry South and Spectrum. He lives with his wife in Newtown Square.
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