Thursday, August 4, 2016

Robert Verdon, #226, Divine Garden


Two lines
of cypress pines
Nip the razorback

Like tweezers.
Far below
I search the

same old path
for a new turning.
While the goldfish jump

In the garden pond
And are never seen.
The blood-red roses

Conceal only aphids.


The radio
plays Beatles

Bringing back
memories
Of the class

party of ‘63.
Like a volcano
That once erupted

And is now
frequented
by children.

I search the
same old path
on hands and knees

Sowing peppers.
I glance up:
The correa bushes
by my birdbath
(without a hiss
of wind) have parted
And there lies
a wood where
three ways meet.

5 comments:

  1. oh divine, dreamlike beauty; divining

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  2. this is actually a very old poem I had published in Mattoid (Deakin University) in the 1980s (I think!); I seemed devoid of poetic inspiration yesterday and posted this one this morning with some guilt as I've been trying to stick to the 'rules' and produce a new poem every day! :)

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  3. p.s. 'divine' here is also a reference to Dantë's 'Divine Comedy' ('a wood where / three ways meet') — though I think Boccaccio or someone added that word to the title

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  4. it's really nice, so tactile and inside the scene

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