Euonymus Alatus

Outside my window, the bushes have turned, redder

than any fire, and the sky is the same blue Giotto

used for Mary’s robes.  My mother says if she still

had a house, she’d plant one or two of these bushes,

and I love how she’s still thinking about gardening,

as if she were in the middle of the story, even though

we both know she’s at the end.  Down in the meadow,

the goldenrod’s gone from cadmium yellow to a feathery

beige, the ghost of itself.  Mother, too, fades away, 

skin thin as the tissue stuffed up her sleeve.  

The scars on her stomach itch and burn, but inside, 

she’s still the girl who loved to turn cartwheels, the woman

whose best days were on fairways and putting greens. 

On television, we watch California go up in smoke,

flames leapfrogging ridge to ridge.  Here, these leaves 

release a shower of scarlet feathers, as everything starts 

to let go.  Oh, how this world burns and burns us.

BARBARA CROOKER is author of twelve chapbooks and ten full-length books of poetry, including Some Glad Morning (Pitt Poetry Series). Read more.


Originally published in Line Dance (Word Press, 2008).

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