In the Garden
A sudden wedge-
shaped shadow
swoops
from the hemlock’s
arms at garden’s
edge.
Wings outstretched,
it stoops
to enfold its prey,
just feet before
me on the path’s
wickerwork
of brick.
Then --
fast as its fierce
approach -- it
swings
away. Not a
whisper of wingbeat
in this spring
dusk.
The maned
oriental maple, fine-
pruned,
has just this week begun
to open
its burgundy, die-cut hands.
Epimedium’s rubra fringe
bibs a hexagonal
block
of basalt planted
to cup and pool
rain.
I bend toward
a river of oxalis
to pluck
a single bouquet
of shattered breast coverts
that nests
among these good-luck
leaves.
She lives and works in Seattle, Washington. Her first poetry collection, BIRDS OF THE NIGHT SKY/STARS OF THE FIELD, was published by the University of Washington press. A new collection, LIKE FIREWEED LEAPING, is in progress.
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