Then, at the same time as the cherry trees, the birds discover sex.
It was just a few days ago, as I was pulling on my socks, that I became conscious of a great commotion on my bedroom windowsill. I'm on the fifth floor of a five-story building, and my windowsills have always been prime bird territory. But usually they flee if they sense any motion behind the glass.
These two didn't flee. I probably could have fetched my camera and recorded the whole performance. But that would have been rude -- a pair of English sparrows was busy consummating their marriage. It didn't take too much anthropomorphism to add the dialog:
He (hopping off, panting, peering expectantly at Her): "Was it
good for you too?"
She (crouching and waggling her tail): "More! More! More,
please!"
He (hopping back on, still panting, doing his very best): "Well, all right, then...."
This continued for three or four cycles until She had been satisfied. Then She was off, without even a word or a shared cigarette. It didn't take too much anthropomorphism to think that He was disappointed.
Last night a robin sat at the very top of a tree in the middle of a construction site (the tree saved for future landscaping, surrounded by rubble and bulldozers), warbling his soul out, head tipped back as if he was drinking the fulvous sky. He was there again tonight.
The passing office-workers saw me stopped there, and one by one they followed my gaze. "It's so beautiful," said a woman with a briefcase. "He was there last night," I told her. It's a small thing, but to this one small beauty I can bear witness.