Poetry Sunday: Midsummer by Arthur Sze
Sitting in my backyard today, I watched tiger swallowtails hovering over Russian sage and thought, "Didn't I read that in a poem?" I asked my friend, Google, and sure enough! There it was. Maybe my old brain hasn't deteriorated so much after all. "Neither you nor I can stop the planting of mines in a field or the next detonation," but at least we have poetry - and tiger swallowtails - to comfort us.
Midsummer
by Arthur Sze
Tiger swallowtails hover over Russian sage—
I smell eucalyptus where there is no
Tiger swallowtails hover over Russian sage—
I smell eucalyptus where there is no
eucalyptus and locate summer in rain.
Like bats emerging out of a cave at dusk,
a thread of grief unfurls in the sky.
Neither you nor I can stop the planting
of mines in a field or the next detonation.
I unclog a drip line along a fence;
in May, lilacs arced over the road in a cascade
of purple blossoms. Now, stilled in a minute
of darkness, I listen to bamboo leaves
unfurl above into sunshine. Untangling
a necklace composed of interlocking
gold chains, then lifting it, I trace
joy, fear, bewilderment, bliss, a this
resplendent in my fingertips. I slip inside
a strawberry runner that extends root, leaf,
then stand in morning starlight and inhabit a song.
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It is an honour to a writer when phrases take root in the memory.
ReplyDeleteTo be able to write something memorable would be simply mind blowing!
DeletePeople in power would do well to heed poetry and swallowtails.
ReplyDeleteIndeed they would.
DeleteI love tiger swallowtail butterflies. :D
ReplyDeleteThey are beautiful.
DeleteI've seen so few butterflies this year, and no swallowtails. It's one of the worrisome changes in nature that I've seen in recent years. I know Nature will persevere, and I agree 100% with David.
ReplyDeleteI've seen fewer butterflies as well and it is indeed worrisome.
DeleteWe have seen so many Swallowtails in our yard this year that I'm pretty sure they like something we have here---wish I knew what it is, but I don't think it's Russian sage.
ReplyDeleteThis is a lovely poem with a message I need to hear and remember.
Swallowtails feed on many different kinds of blooms, so, if you've got a variety of blooms it's likely you've got something they like.
Delete