Garden Musings: Poems Of Trees, Birds And Rain
Nature and gardening serve as the poet’s muses as she contemplates life, each poem unraveling new facets of consciousness.
on a sun-drenched California morning, I ask
if there is a spectacular tree that I may grow in my yard
?
I could grow the chokecherry tree?
or the crab apple tree with magenta flowers Claudio tells me
?
I stare at the purple sky
a goldfinch sings in the tallest palm
?
the song echoes in my mind sparking long-ago sights
Claudio's left-behind coastal Mexican village glimmering in his face
?
the answer comes to me abruptly
I will grow the frangipani tree of my Indian girlhood I?say
?
fragrant white buds burst into golden flowers in my head
in your village you call it the plumeria tree ?don’t you ?i ask
?
Claudio nods
plumeria flowers are luminescent like the moon and far prettier than roses
?
their scent sweeter than pineapple he says
we smile in unison
the song of the goldfinch surges the air to circle the tree of our waking dreams
A different outcome
?in the morning i filled the bird feeder with seeds
the bowl with water and set the two under the magnolia because
birds big and small love the flower-laden magnolia
its fragrant blooms heady like pink champagne
?
i went about my day imagining birds flitting about the magnolia?
nibbling from the feeder ? drinking from the bowl
?
the summer day ran long
the sun burning wild?late into the evening and
?
when I stepped outdoors to watch the coral sunset?
what did I see
the seeds and water lay untouched under the magnolia
not a fledging had stopped by for a bite or sip
why o why did the birds pass up on my seeds and water
disregard my goodwill
receding sunbeams cast shadows on my bewildered hands?
I looked up at the remains of the day
?
all at once, I knew
it was time?
I stopped seeking different outcomes ??
accepted truths for what they are
it was time?indeed that I became
cognizant of the heartache of living
Ruby-throated hummingbird
It’s not even autumn
and already this morning
i spotted a hummingbird
now who could
?
have ever thought
a hummingbird would fly in so early in the year?
dainty delicate dreamlike
it somersaulted in mid-air?
?
its wings the colors of a perky rainbow?
its throat a crimson rose
it flew right past my face?
I cried out loud
?
ruby-throated hummingbird!
?
it flew forward and backward before
settling on a petunia to
sip nectar
I called out to Ella to rush outside so
she too may?
see the hummingbird?
it’s a symbol of love and fortune
a spirit messenger for the brave Ella said
?
how very peculiar it was I thought
love and fortune unfailingly favor the brave
“conscious dreaming”
?
a cloud rolls over my garden
it is a cumulus cloud
a dry cloud
like a blob of cotton
?
I invoke the spirit of the natives
on whose land I stand and pray for rain
so the creek by the lagoon may run deep and blue
so fallen acorns may sprout new oaks
?
the cloud extends into the sky and glides away
faraway willows and pines sway in my mind
quails pecking at their trunks
I conjure the wetland of yore
?
if only the wetland would return and drive the drought away
what might I do to bring the wetland back
a prayer alone can hardly help but
saving trees and nurturing forests
can holler rain in
rain = wetland = green valleys = thriving??earth
I close my eyes
somewhere it is raining loud
frogs are croaking there and birds croon
rhapsodic deer hoofing across the lagoon
wild geese honking in the marshes
wetland throbbing to return?
a raindrop splashes upon my cheek
imperceptible ?weightless ?airy
I can’t touch it but somewhere it’s pouring louder still
I open my eyes
it’s raining in my conscious dreams where
clouds are thick ?dense and heavy with hope
(Simrita Dhir is a California based academic and novelist. She is the author of the critically acclaimed novel The Rainbow Acres)