COVID-19 would have been devastating under any president. But ineffective leadership and a lack of centralized action has made the crisis worse, and created a more difficult road ahead.
鈥溾楬ope鈥 is the thing with feathers.鈥
That鈥檚 the title of one of Emily Dickinson鈥檚 most famous poems. It might also apply to Chi Chi, a pet cockatiel lost, and then found.
Bright yellow with peach cheeks and a mohawk of head feathers, Chi Chi looks like a banana. Her name is short for Chiquita.
Earlier this month she was riding on owner Alan Zimberg鈥檚 shoulder as he walked around his house in Potomac, Maryland. He forgot she was there and went outside. She flew away.
Mr. Zimberg and wife, Lisa Morton, were distraught, according to . The next day, Ms. Morton went to an optometrist appointment at a nearby shopping center and talked all about it. Optometrist Andrew Plaxen did his best to comfort her.
You know what happens next. Later that day Mr. Plaxen walked out to the parking lot and saw two crows attacking a yellow bird. It plummeted to the ground. He ran over and reached out. Chi Chi got up and walked onto his arm.
What were the odds?
Found pet stories are always a balm for the soul. But in these troubled times the tale of Chi Chi might be that and a metaphor as well, a reminder of the persistence of light in the darkest days.
Which is maybe what Emily Dickinson was talking about:
鈥淗ope鈥 is the thing with feathers 鈥
That perches in the soul 鈥
And sings the tune without the words 鈥
And never stops 鈥 at all 鈥撀