Everything sublime is as difficult as it is rare. Baruch Spinoza

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Poetry

Iris
 
 Vivian St. John (1981-1974)

There is a train inside this iris:

You think I'm crazy, & like to say boyish
& outrageous things. No, there is

A train inside this iris.

It's a child's finger bearded in black banners.
A single window like a child's nail,

A darkened porthole lit by the white, angular face

Of an old woman, or perhaps the boy beside her in the stuffy,
Hot compartment. Her hair is silver, & sweeps

Back off her forehead, onto her cold and bruised shoulders.

The prairies fail along Chicago. Past the five
Lakes. Into the black woods of her New York; & as I bend

Close above the iris, I see the train

Drive deep into the damp heart of its stem, & the gravel
Of the garden path

Cracks under my feet as I walk this long corridor

Of elms, arched
Like the ceiling of a French railway pier where a boy

With pale curls holding

A fresh iris is waving goodbye to a grandmother, gazing
A long time

Into the flower, as if he were looking some great

Distance, or down an empty garden path & he believes a man 
Is walking toward him, working

Dull shears in one hand; & now believe me: The train

Is gone. The old woman is dead, & the boy. The iris curls,
On its stalk, in the shade

Of those elms: Where something like the icy & bitter fragrance

In the wake of a woman who's just swept past you on her way
Home

& you remain. 

David St. John
 

4 comments:

Lorac said...

Wow! Great poem and I love the colour of that iris!

Sandra said...

Thank you. It is the lone ranger in a sea of various shades of purple. I like to go bargain hunting when the season is over. I pick up some good plants at a greatly reduced price and sometimes I get a color like this!

Homer and Queen said...

Love the photos!! Dang girl!

Sandra said...

Thank you!