Artist: Jo Grundy
February James Schuyler
A chimney, breathing a
little smoke.
The sun, I can’t see
making a bit of pink
I can’t quite see in the
blue.
The pink of five tulips
at five p.m. on the day
before March first.
The green of the tulip
stems and leaves
like something I can’t
remember,
finding a
jack-in-the-pulpit
a long time ago and far
away.
Why it was December then
and the sun was on the
sea
by the temples we’d gone
to see.
One green wave moved in
the violet sea
like the UN Building on
big evenings,
green and wet
while the sky turns
violet.
A few almond trees
had a few flowers, like a
few snowflakes
out of the blue looking
pink in the light.
A gray hush
in which the boxy trucks
roll up Second Avenue
into the sky. They’re
just
going over the hill.
The green leaves of the
tulips on my desk
like grass light on
flesh,
and a green-copper
steeple
and streaks of cloud
beginning to glow.
I can’t get over
how it all works in
together
like a woman who just
came to her window
and stands there filling
it
jogging her baby in her
arms.
She’s so far off. Is it
the light
that makes the baby pink?
I can see the little
fists
and the rocking-horse
motion of her breasts.
It’s getting grayer and
gold and chilly.
Two dog-size lions face
each other
at the corners of a roof.
It’s the yellow dust
inside the tulips.
It’s the shape of a tulip.
It’s the water in the drinking glass the tulips are in.
It’s a day like any other.
No comments:
Post a Comment