The United States government murdered over 12 billion birds over the course of 1959
threw [sic] 2001. As they killed off the real birds they replaced thim [sic] with surveillance
drone replicas. Indistinguishable from a biological bird. There are now no real
birds left.—Official Birds Aren’t Real Informational Van Bumper Sticker
i. The Philosophical Ornithologist
It is, as all things are, a problem
of perspective. What you think
you are watching, watches
you. Your binoculars convince
themselves they’re quotation marks.
The spy in the song, the feathered
thoughts, the cold hard data
you spun into silky fact
that the comment section couldn’t
wait to run its fingers over.
Of course, the pigeons adapted
to an urban space—they’re party birds
with smokey plumage, and they grow
peckish unless they’re bobbing
beaks to Milli Vanilli or waving
glow sticks around the Sabrett stand.
Ancient Egyptians and Williamsburg
hipsters have nothing in common
except how their feelings take sharp
angles in broad daylight when the sun
nests in their beards. What I mean
is that the bygone is hellbent
on a comeback, i.e., the early bird
pecks a blog post about the importance
of visually manifesting the worm—
actually encompassing its wriggle
in your quaint skull before
taking it to beak. You know though
that we are post-extinction and fully
flapped out—just look at us,
ogling Mother Nature’s augmentation
with craned necks, covering every
millimeter of the visible world
with the vermiculations of a stock
ticker. Something’s wrong. Like,
real wrong: I knock on mountains
and hear a vast metallic thud. I sleep
on eiderdown, but can’t seem to
squawk loud enough to stir the other
Denny’s denizens from their Grand
Slam breakfasts. In Altoona, Pennsylvania
and Waco, Texas, I can feel my face
being scanned every time I munch
a Big Mac. On this highway, a pit stop
is a pit stop is a pit stop and overhead
migration is a chance to grease gears
and re-feather the avian bait-and-switch.
Copyright © 2025 by Anthony Borruso. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on November 5, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.