EGRETS

Egrets are all over Cairo, clustered in trees 

like huge, feathery beasts spreading 

their angelic wings before blessing 

trees and parked cars with thick white splats.  

 

In the rice paddies, each resting on one leg, 

they are graceful ballerinas gazing over 

their watery domain before taking flight 

with shadowy bats and diaphanous butterflies.

 

In the city, though, they are unwanted 

interlopers, these ethereal descendants 

of dinosaurs, and like polar bears, wolves 

and spotted owls, we no longer think 

 

they, or a multitude of other creatures,  

deserve a place at the table. What 

we ignore, though, is there may no 

longer be a place there for us either.