Ars poetica

We went to spot a trogon and I began to hum,
picking paces down a path greater than their sum.

Milky lime, the river, sometimes smoky jade;
in the brush, bromeliads; red orchids in the shade.

Cawing to the trogon as if we knew his sound,
we surely drove him farther in the dim background

where flashes off the river flitted with the breeze
and likenesses of birds flocked behind the trees.

At length we reached the ambit of a murmur
first confused. From hush there rose up whispers, firmer

round each bend, until we knew a roaring
falls could best explain the din, though its pouring

as it filled the pool came to form a quiet cove,
a hollowed cell recessed within the tangle of the grove.

I looked up through the rainbow spray where
my creature should have been, emerald scarlet in the air,

thoughts of ruby green. The water’s plunge made the bluff
beside it soar, but no bird perched up in that rough.

Mine remained the rarest bird, one that’s never flown.
The echo of his dearth is for my ears alone.

***
In Pastis

What Is the Good Life?

Turn not your eyes, leaves though they be,
to dazzle or blaze. Live off not light but light
transformed, simple, eccentric, stoic in the sun.

Study the genitalia of plants. Learn the names
of birds by how they sing and what they eat.
Never forget how primates, armed with chipped

flint cudgels, delight picking off tasty
reproductive organs from inoffensive plants.
The flux of birds in flight may be the same

with us or without but cruelty is ours, to wit
how casually we crush out insects, even
innocuous ones, then raise our eyes on high

to tangled veils of evaporating
jet contrails, photochemical as film.
Where we are most exposed when naked, we

sink roots, touching down like stalks in a vase.
What is the good life, if not just to have lived?
Trust gardeners in the sky not snip us in the bud!

***
I write poetry to have poems to read which I can understand. Though very recent, the animus of this one, in the several senses of that word, dates from the period when the Vietnam War was still a fresh memory. One alternative title is “Peaceful Buddhist Village in Suburbia”.