This Rose Garden
By Jane Hyphen
- 1017 reads
You’re so lucky
To be in this rose garden
To observe the scale of colours
Draw the octave of scents
Into your lungs
To squeeze the petals hard
Inside the palm of your hand
Warm from the sun
Your sweat fusing with perfume
It gets so hot in the rose garden
Fate bulging inside the glossy buds
Swaddled safely out of sight - until
Green splits to reveal their cast
Nothing can stop them now
Destination beautiful
The sun cutting their performance
How soon they turn and wilt
Necks waste thin and droop
As they fall down to decorate
The crumbled earth below
Is this a trick?
As the petals fade away and vanish
Off with their heads!
Another matinee surely
Perhaps weaker, not so blousy
They want to go on
But the fresh leaves darken
The residents turn on them
Sickened with black spots
New shoots sucked to threads
Until the show is over
Then we see how ugly
Is a rose without its roses
How hostile are its thorns
That catch and hold you there
The stems quite charmless
Old ones harden and crack
They are nothing but carbon
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Ah, we are carbon creatures,
Ah, we are carbon creatures, unmaster of the elements. Beauty is as good a destination as any and better than some. Imagine being born a Tory (no don't, it may scar you).
- Log in to post comments
But the stems are worthy to
But the stems are worthy to hold up those flowers, and not take the praise from them! I like the 'octave' of scents and 'scale' of colours. In the spring as we drive around I love the vista of so many different shades of green, many so fresh when first emerging! rhiannon
- Log in to post comments
Loved this :0)
Loved this :0)
These lines particularly :
"Fate bulging inside the glossy buds
Swaddled safely out of sight - until
Green splits to reveal their cast
Nothing can stop them now
Destination beautiful"
I guess this is hybrid Teas or modern varieties? They do look a bit harsh when not flowering, though my old varieties have dignity all year round, their shapes graceful. Ones in parks and prinked gardens can seem a tragic, existing only for their performance
- Log in to post comments
Really like "..octave of
Really like "..octave of scents.." A fusion of senses - musical/hearing and smell.
And that's a great last line:
"They are nothing but carbon"
A thoughtful reverie of the beauty and beast of roses. Whole thing feels like a metaphor.
Intriguing and beautiful
[Should that say "Inside you're the palm of your hand"?]
- Log in to post comments
Hi Jane,
Hi Jane,
your poem brings back memories of my mum back in the 1960s, especially in the lines:-
You're so lucky
To observe the scale of colours
Draw the octave of scents
into your lungs
To squeeze the petals hard
Inside the palm of your hand
Warm from the sun
Your sweat fusing with perfume
My late mum adored her roses and would spend hours pruning and caring for them. They were originals too and had the most gorgeous scent.
It's sad these days when roses have no perfume and like you say, when the stems can't support the flower and they droop as if given up before they even get going.
I don't get to visit rose gardens anymore, but my mum would get very excited at bringing home a new perfumed rose and watching it grow.
So many memories. Thank you for reminding me Jane.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
Very beautiful, and so
Very beautiful, and so cleverly written. Thank you for this one, Jane.
- Log in to post comments
Pick of the Day
This clever and mesmerising poem is our Facebook and X Pick of the Day! Please do share if you enjoy it too.
Cover image by Li Qun, free to use at Wikimedia Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:%22Rose%22_by_Li_Qun_1999.jpg
- Log in to post comments