Today I learned that Nikola Tesla fell in love with a pigeon

She was the light of his life: one 
of thousands, a pigeon
pure-white as a lightning bolt
with gray-tipped wings
as if dipped in ash. He believed
they understood each other,
an electric current of impossible love
beating back and forth between them.
I suppose not even a genius is immune
to the irrationality of love. He was,
after all, another soul seeking purpose
in a world that refused him.
At night, he took long walks to find her,
and find her he always did,
a beacon of peace
in the cruel and waning days of his career.
This is a man who declined to accept
the Nobel prize alongside Edison;
who discovered the frequency of the earth—
heard the planet sing like a ringing bell
and saw the future’s precise geometry
crystallize in his mind;
who understood from birth
the symmetry of breath and sky.
In the final weeks of his life,
Tesla was struck by a taxi cab
and couldn’t walk to his pigeon, so
he left the window open for her
and waited. Later, she flew in
through the window and died in his arms.
He said: “Up to that time I knew
with a certainty that I would complete
my work, no matter how ambitious
my program, but when that something
went out of my life I knew
my life’s work was finished.”
It’s one of many strange and spectacular
stories of the scientist’s life,
a testament to the wide spectrum of
the progressive utility of madness.
The walls we build, the wires
we’re bound by, the wildness
inseparable from the civilized self.
Both pigeons and people play their part,
as do the smallest bolts and washers
in holding together the meat
and skeletons of great machines. Yet,
all the fundamental laws of the universe
can be reduced to one:
To remain sane in this world
is to live without love.
And so, a pocketful of birdseed.

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