My Sunday morning is quiet and lazy. Clear sky, the air soft and mild. An occasional breeze follows the butterflies: a giant swallowtail, two monarchs, three yellow tiger swallowtails, four cabbage whites. The butterfly effect seems to move the floppy leaves of the castor beans and push the drifts of zinnias and cannas. The sidle of the flowers and foliage soothes me, and I allow my ultimate concerns to settle into the deep time of wings and blossoms. Sparrows gather on the ground around the bird feeders, swoop to the honeysuckles at a noise from the street, then come back one by one until the next fright, their back and forth complementing the lapping of the breeze, the wing-induced breathing of the landscape. Fledglings feed and escape with the flock. The fledging of has gone on for months, momentum growing with the summer. Throughout the June, July, August and September, the parents taught their young, and the lessons took hold. The fledglings have their place now beside the adults,