Winter Birds

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Authors: Jamie Langston Turner

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Winter Birds

Jamie Langston Turner

© 2006 by Jamie Langston Turner

Published by Bethany House Publishers
11400 Hampshire Avenue South
Bloomington, Minnesota 55438
www.bethanyhouse.com

Bethany House Publishers is a division of
Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan
www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

Ebook edition created 2012

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

ISBN 978-1-4412-6124-3

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Quoted material from Time magazine used by permission.

Scripture quotations are from the King James Version of the Bible.

Cover design by Lookout Design Group, Inc.

“Turner [is] one of the best writers in the Christian market.”

—Publishers Weekly

“Turner [proves] that a faithful Christian witness can come packaged in a quality novel.”

—Publishers Weekly

With gratitude and love

FOR
IVA MAE PATTERSON TURNER
(May 11, 1921-January 6, 2004)

Daily I see your tender heart, your ready
smile, your strong faith, your love of
music, your pleasure in a job well done,
your sense of humor
.

AND

FOR
ALTYN JAMES TURNER
(b. November 27, 1918)

Daily I see your standards of excellence,
your attention to detail, your reverence
for God’s Word, your willingness to
sacrifice for those you love.

Daily I see you both in your son Daniel,
my husband, and for your great gift to
me, I thank you
.

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright Page

Endorsements

Dedication

  
1.   Conscience Is But a Word That Cowards Use

  
2.   The Whirligig of Time Brings in His Revenges

  
3.   To Dive Into the Fire, to Ride on the Curled Clouds

  
4.   Some Meteor That the Sun Exhales

  
5.   The Wide World and All Her Fading Sweets

  
6.   Vowing More Than the Perfection of Ten

  
7.   A Foul and Pestilent Congregation of Vapors

  
8.   As the Gentle Rain From Heaven

  
9.   Against the Stormy Gusts of Winter’s Day

10.   Honor Is a Mere Scutcheon

11.   So Strong a Prop to Support So Weak a Burden

12.   Men Must Endure Their Going Hence

13.   Wipe Off the Dust That Hides Our Scepter’s Gilt

14.   Second Childishness and Mere Oblivion

15.   A Tattered Weed, of Small Worth Held

16.   Like a Rich Armor, Worn in Heat of Day

17.   O Tiger’s Heart Wrapped in a Woman’s Hide

18.   Now, Music, Sound, and Sing Your Solemn Hymn

19.   Like a Fair House Built on Another Man’s Ground

20.   And Therefore Is Winged Cupid Painted Blind

21.   And When He Falls, He Falls Like Lucifer

22.   A Tide in the Affairs of Men

23.   What’s Gone and What’s Past Help

24.   Trifles Light As Air

25.   That Makes These Odds All Even

26.   The Web of Our Life Is of a Mingled Yarn

27.   Home Art Gone and Taken Thy Wages

28.   To Feed on Such Sweet Honey, and Kill the Bees

29.   To Burn This Night With Torches

30.   Stones Have Been Known to Move

31.   The Thread of His Verbosity

32.   No Other Tribute at Thy Hands

33.   My Gracious Silence, Hail!

About the Author

Other Books by Author

Back Cover

After so long grief, such felicity!


T
HE
C
OMEDY
O
F
E
RRORS

Chapter 1

Conscience Is But a Word That Cowards Use

The pine warbler eats its neighbors in the pine tree—insects and spiders—as well as seeds and berries. As it creeps over the bark of the tree, the warbler’s olive green and yellow plumage sometimes becomes stained with pine resin
.

Rachel comes to take my dishes. I watch her move slowly and silently. I have cleaned my plate tonight, have used my biscuit to polish its surface. The dish is one Rachel makes from an old recipe card titled Irma’s Beef Dinner. The card is worn around the edges and splattered with tomato sauce and onion soup. Rachel doesn’t know who Irma is, she has told me, and she doesn’t remember how she came by the recipe card. Rachel may be excused from remembering such details.

As for me, perhaps I may be excused from remembering details, also. I have been young, but now I am old. That is the usual course, though I have often dreamed of how it would be to say I have been old and now I am young, to implant my old mind into my youthful body of fifty or sixty years ago. I would even trim it to twenty or thirty if someone were granting favors. Or ten.

In matters of money I have been poor, and now I am rich. I have often considered how it might have been had my youth intersected at some point with my wealth. But I have no time for dreams now, nor for regrets. I have had plenty of both in my life, as any other man or woman, but I give my attention now to staying alive. It is an endeavor at which I continue to toil in spite of its many inscrutabilities, for to give it up would be to yield to nothingness, an enemy I am not eager to confront.

I am in the cold season of life, and the words that come to mind as I rise in the morning are these: “Now is the winter of our discontent.” I borrow them from John Steinbeck, a fellow American, who lifted them from Shakespeare, who put them into the mouth of the Duke of Gloucester, also known as Richard III. Though I am hardly the villain Richard III was, I am no saint. Though I have not murdered, I have used words to maim and destroy. Though I repudiate the notion of conscience, as did Richard, I do not rest easy at night. Often when I wake in the morning, it is after few hours of troubled sleep. I cannot sleep long for fear that I will let go of living. Rather a winter of discontent than no winter at all.

By day birds flock to my window. I watch them feed, sometimes companionably, two or three different species at the same feeder, and sometimes singly, pecking quickly, nervously, darting glances to yard and sky for unwelcome company. I monitor the feeder for squirrels, which devise crafty methods of mounting it. If tapping on my window fails to scare them off, I open the window. I also have a small-caliber handgun, which I know how to use. Squirrels, however, are not intimidated by the sight of a gun, and I would never fire it for risk of damage to the bird feeder.

Birds never interested me before this, the winter of our discontent. I was sometimes diverted by other things, but never birds. Even now I know little of them except what I observe through my window and what I read in my
Book of North American Birds
, a large but overly generalized collection of short summaries describing six hundred different species of birds, each page also boasting an artist’s rendering, in color, of the featured bird. This worthy volume was compiled by the editors of
Reader’s Digest
, a body of persons whose aim is knowledge rather than understanding. It was presented to me by my nephew Patrick, who, with his wife, Rachel, shares with me the winter of our discontent.

Because of Patrick and Rachel, I do not have to modify the phrase to make it singular: “the winter of my discontent.” Truly, it is the winter of our collective discontent, though Patrick and Rachel try to hide it and though at the end of it they will receive a reward to compensate for the trouble of wintering me. It is a winter barely begun, for I have been here only four weeks. By the calendar, a week into November, it is shy of literal winter by six weeks. “Short winters” is a description misapplied to Mississippi by those who know nothing of the South. We natives know how long these short winters can be.

A cantankerous old woman is never so annoying as when she is in some way related to you, and if you are strapped with her, overseer of her care, recipient of her complaints, then she may be a burden past telling. I know this. Before I lived here, before I myself qualified as a burden, I knew this, for I was my mother’s keeper for five months before she died of irritability, a condition that had started in her bowel years earlier but metastasized to her mind and behavior by the end. Throughout my life I have been told that I am like my mother in many ways except in looks. My mother was a great beauty in her youth.

A difficult old woman may be entertaining if you are not responsible for her upkeep. Such a termagant lived in my mother’s boardinghouse when I was a child. I used to delight in Mrs. Beadle’s nasty temper, the tactless things she said about the meals my mother prepared, the way she upbraided the postman, whom she accused of withholding letters from her and whom she regularly threatened to sue in a court of law.

One day I was hiding behind the spirea bush at the corner of the house, spying on Mrs. Beadle as she sat on the front porch. She was muttering to herself and working her jaw in a way I found both freakish and fascinating. Between mutterings she would pucker her mouth, then push her tongue out and let the tip of it move about slowly, like a mollusk venturing from its shell, testing the air for danger. I must have laughed, for she turned and saw me. Before I could flee, she had pronounced me an ugly, spiteful child with the look of a bow-legged, mangy dog, at which point I ceased to delight in her. It was Mrs. Beadle who first apprised me of the fact that I was not an attractive child. My parents and sisters had kept it from me. After that, whenever I looked into a mirror, I marveled that I had not seen it for myself, that it had taken a peculiar old woman like Mrs. Beadle to point it out.

This I also share with Richard III. As he was small of stature, ill-featured, distrustful, and fidgety, so am I. Though not truly a hunchback, I am crooked, one shoulder being higher than the other. This defect I saw for myself when I began to examine photographs after Mrs. Beadle’s pronouncement of my ugliness. After this I could adjust my stance to correct the fault when I remembered. Now I do not care. The fact that I stand off-center is the least of my worries. That I limp when I walk is likewise of no concern.

Imagine two pretty, graceful hands shaping a mud pie. I am the mud pie, my sisters the hands. Or two flowering dogwood trees with a little stunted ginkgo growing between them. I am the ginkgo. Smell the fruit of a ginkgo sometime for a full appreciation of the analogy. Or a common field sparrow occupying a nest with two golden-winged warblers. I am the sparrow. But the hands have fallen silent and the dogwoods ceased flowering. The sparrow has outlived the warblers. My bird book tells me that the female field sparrow does not sing.

My care is a responsibility that Patrick has taken upon himself willingly, though, as in most duties, with insufficient understanding of what it will entail. Tall mountains always look surmountable from a distance, but once the arduous upward trek commences, the peak is nowhere to be seen. There are ruts and thorny weeds along the path, sometimes only sheer wall with no path at all.

Patrick was chosen, along with his wife, Rachel, from among five applicants to house me during the winter of our discontent. I interviewed each of the five—two nephews, two nieces, and one great-niece—and selected Patrick. I was honest with all five, to a point, stating the simple terms of the trade: my money for their food and shelter. The food and shelter would come now, the bulk of the money later. Perhaps I led them to believe there would be more money at the end than there will be. I suffer no distress of conscience because of this. “Conscience is but a word that cowards use,” as King Richard put it. There will be money enough, certainly more than Patrick has ever had.

I had the foresight to arrange for my winter before autumn had ended, though the flutterings of my heart spoke urgently of leaves falling rapidly. My mother died at eighty-six, my sisters at seventy-nine and seventy-five. At eighty I knew I must not delay. The branches of the tree were nearly bare. My method: I sent letters to nine people, family and acquaintances, five of whom responded to apply as Providers of Winter Hospice for Sophia Marie Langham Hess.

In the letter I laid out the terms of my care. I stated my reasonable expectation to die within a year, two or three at the most. I did not state my intention to resist this expectation. Those reading the letter could have concluded that I had no fear of meeting my end, that I was ready to yield, that their part would be easy.

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