Poetry Friday: Parasols? Or Parasails?!

The wind is starting up again — whipping around at about thirty miles per hour. I’m kind of hoping it settles down, but it doesn’t much matter when I’m home snug with my tea and my books.

Metamorphosis

Always it happens when we are not there–

The tree leaps up alive into the air,

Small open parasols of Chinese green

Wave on each twig. But who has ever seen

The latch sprung, the bud as it burst?

Spring always manages to get there first.

Lovers of wind, who will have been aware

Of a faint stirring in the empty air,

Look up one day through a dissolving screen

To find no star, but this multiplied green,

Shadow on shadow, singing sweet and clear.

Listen, lovers of wind, the leaves are here!
— by May Sarton, from Collected Poems 1930-1993. © W.W. Norton and Co.
It’s true — finally in Glasgow, we have leafage! If you look carefully in the picture you’ll notice a branch across the buttercups, and indeed it has the tiniest little leaf buds on it. Flowers — carelessly showy and quick blooming like the buttercups pictured — have across the city burst into brightness and just as quickly had their petals brushed into the streets by hard rain and gales, but the leaves — more cautious by half — are taking their time and doing their yearly sneak attack. When we least expect it, there will be wind soughing through the leaves again.

Those of you who enjoy writing process “porn” as Gwenda calls it, will enjoy Jules’ post at Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast, where she interviews the poets of Cutting A Swath and explores how the six month poetry project process began.

Poetry Friday is hosted today at The Well-Read Child.

About the author

tanita s. davis is a writer and avid reader who prefers books to most things in the world, including people. That's ...pretty much it, she's very boring and she can't even tell jokes. She is, however, the author of nine books, including Serena Says, Partly Cloudy, Go Figure, Henri Weldon, and the Coretta Scott King honored Mare's War. Look for her new MG, The Science of Friendship in 1/2024 from Katherine Tegen Books.

Comments

  1. Lovely poem and photo Tadmack. My favorite line: “The tree leaps up alive into the air,” Ah!

    I’m having a hard time staying inside today as we finally have a stunningly springy day. What’s with these kids wanting to sit at computers?

  2. The poem reminds me of those little seedpods that come spiraling down from certain trees like little helicopters, and the almost unreal green of the new leaves on our Japanese maple–did I tell you we planted a 10-foot Japanese maple? (We got it for free from a friend who has a ranchette!) The buds are RED, but the leaves are green. It is so happy about springtime.

  3. Here, too, the latch has finally sprung. The haze of new leaves in trees and shrubs, the sweet blown flowers, the tulips…I just can’t soak it all up enough to last another year! But I’ll try!

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