The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Jane Blue
Smoke
Another week has begun its inevitable climb to the future.
The lace of sycamore twigs beyond the bent pruned rose canes.
I like to look at the smoke that swirls from the neighbor’s chimney, up into the fog, disappearing and returning again. Thinking how
I would shyly give my grandmother little packets of poems, which she looked at about the way she looked at the gift mouse in the cat’s jaws.
The cat wasn’t her cat, but the cat chose my little grandmother: steely- eyed and corseted, whom the cat knew was the neediest person in the house. Obsession with the Dogwood
1.
It is officially spring. The dogwood blooming lacy and spindly in the shade of the plane tree.
Under the plane tree, a flock of parrot tulips gold-orange with crenellated petals like wings.
And bright yellow tulips with black centers like eyelashes. A cherry tree across the street.
Why do I think of the past? I don’t miss anyone, not badly. And it was a different place
with elms and blue-eyed forget- me-nots under an ancient deodar tree. The generation before me
has faded away, as this season of flowers will. You must create the world from nothing yourself.
2.
Every morning I think marriage an amazing state to be in. The roses laid out in the window
like a bouquet; the sprays of white dogwood, pink geraniums flowing down from a pot, entwined
with the roses. And we are there with them, silently, two thirds of our lives together, meshed.
Separation would tear out the hearts of those flowers. We are in our winter now, but here
at the end of winter, the roses, the dogwood, the geraniums begin to bloom. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |