Ernest Wilson goes to China
There had been despair when at last he’d reached the site of
the tree
and discovered instead a new home constructed of well
seasoned planks of timber
which his elderly scribbled map had not allowed for.
Behind him lay Yunan, disease, bandits, shipwreck and the incomprehensible
language
so abrupt he could not hear when speech turned to laughter,
then back to speech.
He suspected laughter most of the time.
His specimen case bulged with many things but it was only as
he finally swung
into the branches with arboreal ease in a secret copse at the
brink of a cliff
(last autumn’s segments of fruit already scooped and bagged),
that he could see the bracts as white doves falling
until in the river they sailed; paper lanterns lit from
within.
From the crook of the tree his own diamond body gleamed.
This is lovely, Emma. I'm completely drawn in. You've created a whole world of the poem: intact and utterly convincing.
ReplyDeletea lovely sense of light in the final stanza
ReplyDeleteeach stanza, a gem
ReplyDeletewhat a fascinating story
ReplyDelete