translating the secret garden
poetic leaves
expressively silent blanket on
birdworld, collects and dribbles from the
poetic leaves of my overgrown
fatsia. Each spring I assess the
growth, the space, the possibilities,
wrestle with ‘to prune or not to prune’
the question stretching out over time;
the fatsia stretching fledgling leaves
out over the secret garden path.
Late, I chop the emerging dragon
wings, guardians vying with spears of
samurai bamboo to conceal, not
close, access to a privacy of
green clipped box, black strappy lily-grass
formal seating that collects heat in
drystone walls and yet devolves to spread
fairy tales of fleabane and toadflax in
recurring mists of white nigella.
magpie rhetoric
garden larder
peony path
lost hosta
miniature monsters
Like a lizard, I sit soaking the heat
protected by the feasting green
of jungle and the factor fifty that
glistens on my more fragile skin.
The heat prickles on my surface and creeps
slowly into my winter-cold bones. I
listen gratefully past my tinnitus
to the merciful strands of birdsong
that hang just above the fence, but far
below the watching crows; and I watch
a small world of miniature monsters
conducting their own fragile ecology
in the semi-alien environment
of my jungle, eating and breeding on
my treasures; eating and breeding on each other.
seed story
of unwanted post. Initial disappointment displaced
by curiosity, I checked the sow-before date and
could hardly believe my good fortune. I know I purchased
too early, had such trouble restraining the urge to
get started months ago, but there is still time
and two years before they might no longer be viable.
Tomorrow I shall clear a fine tilth bed for them. I can
hardly resist the urge to creep out in the dark to
prepare; one packet contains one thousand seeds;
imagine the miracle concealed. More impressive
than prayer on a pinhead, a starter pack and all the
information needed to inform the production of
all this times one thousand, in a tiny silver packet.
star plant
I kneel before my green jungle
amazed that all this spring rain has
rebirthed plants I imagined dead.
Intricate Mandelbrot workings
lace a verdant tapestry of
hope, planted, each one, with eager
expectation of perennial
visits, green shoot reminders of
days in the sun. Pushing its way
through new spring brunnera is the
delicate fern that failed to thrive
two, three years past. Lone clematis
my last best hope for success, now
racing its way skyward from the
bare brown earth of its premature
dying in that summer drought.
And astrantia, brilliant
sight between dark arches of
Solomon’s Seal and a fine pale
shuttlecock fern, it lives and with it
my hope and imagination.