At the center of the city I come upon a hill, at the top of which is a very large bird. I see it resembles an eagle. Though it’s about 14 stories high, it’s as docile as a rabbit. Its foot, I see, is tied to a stout nearby building. The rope used for this purpose is thick, the knot alone having the bulk of a cottage, or a pleasant bungalow. I see also, as night falls, that all over the miraculous bird there are windows from which the residents, framed in the warm yellow light of their domiciles, peer down into the street or out into the star-filled night. I suspect they are kept warm by the heat of its body, suspect also they lead precarious lives, as even the slightest movement, the lifting of a wing, would send their well-stacked dishes spinning