The warmth is flirting with the air around here. So I pulled up a series of stories I wrote a year ago in Washington Square, during the blushing moments of last year's springtime. So have a read, and then cross your fingers that the warmth will get a little more tenacious sometime real soon.
She was shushing the birds.
"Shhhh! Shhhhhhhhh!!" She hissed at them, jumping up to shake the branches of the poor tree where they perched. I could hear the chirpy chirp chirp of the park birds – the slightly squeaky ones that are constantly set on "repeat" and chirp and chirp and chirp with an uncanny volume, being such small, handful-sized avians.
It wasn't a large tree but then, she wasn't a large woman, squat and tiny, your stereotypical Italian matron, assiduously engaged in dictatorial peacemaking (as Italian matrons are wont to do).
Not being tall enough to grab a good hold of a branch, she clutched at a few leaves from a low-hanging bough, then furiously rattled it.
"Shhhh!!!"
As I approached down the brick-laid sidewalk, I heard her say, if not directly at me then certainly for my benefit, "They are fighting! Why they fighting? Stop fighting! Shhh! Why you fighting?"
I couldn't place the broken English; perhaps she really was an Italian matron, transported here to the streets of Philadelphia from some small sun-drenched town in the Tuscan hillsides (where the entire cypress tree, perhaps, is much easier to rattle by simply shaking the bottom-most branches) with the sole purpose to quiet these argumentative, voluble birds.
As I walked away, I couldn't help but think, perhaps this woman has an intimate and scientifically-informed knowledge of the nature of park birds. Perhaps those chirpy handfuls are actually engaged in an unnatural blood-fued battle over the territory of a small tree bough. Perhaps she isn't crazy.
Then I thought, perhaps she really isn't crazy. Perhaps she yearns for peace and amity just like most of the rest of us; she's just less guarded about working for it.
In today's warring world, is peace really for the birds?