Once we arrived in Sicily with our
two-month-old daughter, Nino immediately set to work trying to reorient himself
in the town of his birth. And one of the first things he did was find someone
who could provide him with a cardito (cardellino or European goldfinch). They
were so cute, and they sang divinely. But I felt bad about keeping them in a
cage, especially since they looked so sad and tried so hard to get out.
We had a number of them over the years
and then suddenly, Nino came home with one that had been born in a cage. And it
was love at first sight. It was, basically, impossible not to love him. I think
Nino tried so hard because he wanted to find that same chemistry that he saw when
the sparrow flew out of the tree at the hospital and land on my hand and then
jump onto my head.
Well, we found it, Cididù and I. Nino knew
it from the time he walked into the house and heard the two of us singing “The
Eagle and the Hawk” along with John Denver. And while he did stay in a cage
most of the time (especially when our cat was around), he did venture out of
the cage when he felt at ease. He may have been in the cage, but the cage door
was always open so he could come out and stretch his wings. And he never left, even
when the front door was left open.
Cididù and I stayed friends until the
day I came back to the States. But people still talk about how we would sing
together with John Denver. Maybe he imagined himself an eagle. And I always
thought of him as my tiny eagle in cardellino feathers.
Copyright © Mary Purpari 3 April 2021 All Rights Reserved
Goldfinches are lovely birds! We have a lot of them around our feeders in the winter :) And there are some nice folktales about them too!
ReplyDeleteThe Multicolored Diary
I would love to hear folk tales about these delightful birds. There is one actually living in my backyard here in Brooklyn.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for coming to visit me here.