August 21, 2011

Fiction by Lisel Mueller


Going south, we watched spring
unroll like a proper novel:
forsynthia, dogwood, rose;
bare trees, green lace, full shade.
By the time we arrived in Georgia
the complications were deep.

When we drove back, we read
from back to front.  Maroon went wild,
went scarlet, burned once more
and then withdrew into pink,
tentative, still in bud.
I thought it only as we could go on
and meet again, shy as strangers.

No comments:

My Own Foolishness

I know that ever since I was a child, I have always wanted to get married and raise a family. That has been one of my obsessions. The proble...