They make in the twining tide the motions of birds.
Such are the cries, also, they exchange
In their nakedness that is soft as a bird's
Held in the hand, and as fragile and strange.
And the blue mirror entertains them till they take
The sea for another bird: the crumbling
Hush-hush where the gentlest waves break
About their voices would be his bright feathers blowing.
Only the dull shore refrains. But from this patient
Bird each, in the plumage of his choice,
Might learn the deep shapes and secret of flight
And the shore be merely a perch to which they might
Return. And the mirror turns serpent
And their only sun is swallowed up like a voice.
W.S. Merwin, The First Four Books of Poems, 155
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