Honeysuckle Taint, from Backyard Suite

Michael Berryhill, a Houston born and based poet, was a friend from the age of eight on after his family moved behind our house in the East End, a true backyard buddy. He passed recently in hospice. 

Here is initial poem from Backyard Suite, my memorial to the Edenic source of our shared poetic vocation.

***

1 – Honeysuckle Taint  

Big trees grew smaller,
small ones big. I could 
reach the third crotch
of the supple willow, 

tippy toe to catalpa 
pods once shinnied up
after. Surreptitiously I
picked a fig. It smacked

of delights so simple they 
had passed me by, wrestling 
with boys in breechclouts
over thistles and thorns,

mulberries chewed with tar 
exuded by summer heat
from telephone poles tasting
of pinard from Provence.   

With gentle, bruising brushes, 
as one might caress a clitoris, 
I turned gardenia petals brown, 
its honeysuckle taint 

a chorus of smells 
redolent of the imp,
the impervious scamp
I no longer am.

Precepts may be percepts
(or vice-versa),
amnesia be tractable 
to ophactory cure.

 Backyard Suite consists of the following:

1 –  Honeysuckle Taint
2 – Memory, the Mockingbird
3 – Sad To Be a Child
4 – Yard
5 – A Session of Therapy
6 – Gladiola
7 – Shinny