Saturday, February 27, 2010

In the Desert

The Temptation of Mirage
by Diane Lockward


Save your water and green vegetation.
What I want is the desert.

Keep your deciduous pines,
the solace of shade and shadows.

Give me starkness on the horizon,
predictability of beige and brown.

Let me suffer the heat and burn,
air so hot it undulates in sine waves,

and the illusion of water,
the levitation of lake.

Not one human for hundreds of miles,
eternity of sand, an open-air coffin.

Everything fixed and final,
except the night-blooming cereus,

its creamy petals like white silk,
Cinderella in the desert,

narcotic fragrance of the skin,
sweet, juicy pulp of the fruit,

red as a splash of blood,
for one night only, quench of beauty

more real than I can bear,
closed forever by morning sun.


1 comment:

  1. Earth Worship

    To the earth,
    they bow down
    with their faces
    to the ground.

    They fall down
    on their knees
    before oceans,
    rocks, and trees.

    Beneath their feet,
    the sod,
    they are worshiping
    as God.

    Demanding
    men be green
    and serve
    mother earth, their queen.

    Constance Walden

    ReplyDelete