Still, 
          Citizen Sparrow
          
         
        Still, citizen sparrow, this 
          vulture which you call 
          Unnatural, let him but lumber again to air 
          Over the rotten office, let him bear 
          The carrion ballast up, and at the tall 
        Tip of the sky lie cruising. 
          Then you'll see 
          That no more beautiful bird is in heaven's height, 
          No wider more placid wings, no watchfuller flight; 
          He shoulders nature there, the frightfully free, 
        The naked-headed one. Pardon 
          him, you 
          Who dart in the orchard aisles, for it is he 
          Devours death, mocks mutability, 
          Has heart to make an end, keeps nature new. 
        Thinking of Noah, childheart, 
          try to forget 
          How for so many bedlam hours his saw 
          Soured the song of birds with its wheezy gnaw, 
          And the slam of his hammer all the day beset 
        The people's ears. Forget 
          that he could bear 
          To see the towns like coral under the keel, 
          And the fields so dismal deep. Try rather to feel 
          How high and weary it was, on the waters where 
        He rocked his only world, 
          and everyone's. 
          Forgive the hero, you who would have died 
          Gladly with all you knew; he rode that tide 
          To Ararat; all men are Noah's sons.
        
          
        Richard Wilbur