I have. The Government made me do it.
For four days, I have borne witness
Then curled, like a burned child recoils into a tight ball
Of muscle, skin, and pain.
Royal-blue clouds descend
To crispy spheres of fibrous dust,
Beauty meeting truth, truth defeating beauty.
And at me. I slip between their ears to hear them acknowledge, judge,
By the rule of law - glibly imposed, weakly obeyed, silently abided.
And the flower falls farther from heaven, closer to earth.
4 comments:
Oh...thats very sad....did the hydrangea survive?....usually these bushy plants survive a few dry weeks....you could try watering the plant both at the roots and all over.
"And the flower falls farther from heaven, closer to earth" - that was siply amazing.
I was puzzled by stanzas 1, 3 and 5 ...
Puzzled how, Phil? The first simply describes the event -- Fulton County water restrictions forcing the poet not to water his hydrangea. The second and third are artistic explanations of the hydrangea's leaves and blooms wilting and drying. The fifth is a critique of the poet's willingness to sacrifice his flowers to obey the rules.
Once I read a comment about water restrictions and found out what hydrangeas look like, I got it. But reading it cold as a person who has never actually watered a lawn and wouldn't know a hydrangea if it started growing out of my nose, I was just having a hard time understanding the role of the Government in the story.
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