Why would Iran鈥檚 president-elect want a compromise with the U.S. to revive the nuclear deal? The answer lies in how hard-liners see聽 their best way to satisfy, and pacify, a disgruntled, apathetic population.
I heard a hermit thrush on the road down to the boat landing this week, and thought of summer.
In warmer months, hermit thrush song is one of the glories of the woodlands of northern America and Canada. The appearance of the birds themselves is drab and unremarkable. As the name implies, they are reclusive and difficult to spot. But their music! , it spirals out from the trees, a haunting message from another world, or another time.
They鈥檙e common in our area of Maine, showing up in lowland forests in late spring. When they start singing, the leaves are out and there is dappled sunlight on the floor of the woods. Perhaps they鈥檙e not as well known as chickadees or loons, but to me they evoke the height of the year, the early afternoon of perfect weather days, with an undercurrent of melancholy, the knowledge the weather, and the season, won鈥檛 last.
鈥淎ncient stories which can go on for long stretches of time,鈥 an ornithologist I know says of their songs.
The hermit thrush has inspired a number of poets. Sometimes it鈥檚 even been Perhaps its most famous literary appearance is in Walt Whitman鈥檚 great elegy for Abraham Lincoln, Whitman used 鈥渁 shy and hidden bird,鈥 鈥渢he thrush,鈥 鈥渢he hermit,鈥 as nothing less than the collective musical expression of the grief and hope of the American people at a time of troubles.
Sing on! sing on, you gray-brown bird!
Sing from the swamps, the recesses 鈥 pour your chant from the bushes;
Limitless out of the dusk, out of the cedars and pines.