Weeds
My emerald legions, how tall you have grown:
so many. With what supernatural speed
so many. With what supernatural speed
you overlord the weakest in the garden—
frizzled hydrangeas, sere mint, sun-starved basil.
frizzled hydrangeas, sere mint, sun-starved basil.
Tousle-headed, you can see the sky
above the cowering, defeated plots.
above the cowering, defeated plots.
This is your day of triumph: Eager sugars
rise up through your ramifying stalks.
rise up through your ramifying stalks.
And I allowed it. My cool inattention
found good reasons to look the other way,
found good reasons to look the other way,
since all that grows is good, or so I thought.
How soon would height recall high thoughts, and yet,
How soon would height recall high thoughts, and yet,
if I uproot you now, how I would miss you.
Sweet knotgrass, heartsick briar, purple thistle.
Sweet knotgrass, heartsick briar, purple thistle.
Even tilled up, the garden wouldn’t be
as it was when I played here years ago
as it was when I played here years ago
and my grandmother warned me, since I’d gotten
lanky, not to grow too fast. She lived
lanky, not to grow too fast. She lived
to be a hundred, early years wiped clean
from her memory, all except for this:
from her memory, all except for this:
a vague lightness, as though a sense of wings
lifted her above the loamy ground,
lifted her above the loamy ground,
and all she thought of, as the wind upheld her,
was of falling, how tenuous her flight.
was of falling, how tenuous her flight.
Or so I imagine. Though half her age,
I, too, can’t quite remember what it was like
I, too, can’t quite remember what it was like
to feel light-footed, open to the sun,
without the clogging stems elbowing out
what I had meant when I first planted here:without the clogging stems elbowing out
larkspur, geraniums, cilantro, lime.
I'm a subscriber. Please don't sue me.
No comments:
Post a Comment