Songbird Named Hope
I spoke with a bird
who had known the world,
before I even knew there was a world to know.
The bird flying swiftly from the moon to Earth
perched itself on a tree near my bedroom window.
Now, I knew what dreams were and I had known the bite of Life’s nightmares;
but I never experienced the beauty of a dream in sleep.
The bird came to me
and sang low and sweet.
Waking me to a song I had never heard before.
Because if I had heard this song,
I would have gone to bed singing.
Not a song from my mouth.
A song from a body that holds a soul,
a soul awakened.
It was a song so sweet that I did not merely feel happy. I felt altogether more. As if my body opened up, needing to be a part of the world beyond my bedroom walls.
I asked the bird, “How do you sing a song so sweet, when you've seen the very worst of the world?”
The bird, before flying away to see the world yet again, sang to me,
“Because I have also seen the very BEST of it. And ‘Hope is the thing with feathers…’ remember that, little one.”
I went to bed that night, and I dreamed for the first time in my whole life.
And it was filled with feathers, and it was filled with songs,
but most of all it was filled with Hope.
--Quote from Emily Dickinson's poem "Hope is the thing with feathers (254)"