The Rose
At
middle-age, my father planted roses—
the
man who never painted or patched, satisfied
with
the leaky roof and white siding grown green
with
time. He broke ground in early spring,
not
long after mother found his truck grafted
to
the shadows of a strange house in town.
I
remember the day the mail-order roses
arrived,
my father sifting the thick-caned,
dormant
plants from the damp wood shavings
in
which they were packed: Double Delight,
Pilgrim
and Prince, Wandering Star, Eden’s
Peace,
Lasting Love, Scarlet Tongues of Flame.
On
planting day, father plowed the sunny
plot
with a new tiller—muscling the straining
machine
like a wild horse he could not quite
control. By summer, the leafed-out, stubby
stems
offered their first true buds—small, tight
fists
of color—yellow, white, pink, cream,
and
red ellipses hovering in the stifling heat.
Late
summer nights, father walked the blooming
rows,
wrapped in the sweet company of roses
while
we slept, every cupped and knotted
bud
rising like secret love or thorny questions
whose
answers slowly unfurl. Even now,
I
see him: standing in the tilled plot,
staring
down
fragrant rows, his eyes searching
for
hidden flowers in the moon-softened dark,
thinking
of roses outside the bounds of sight,
learning
how seasons of human pain pay
such a
small price for the presence of mystery,
finding
what comforts beauty bestows
in
the place of the rose, what deep-seated truths
are
throned in the petal-covered heart of the rose.
The one word I stumbled over in the first reading was "ellipses." After the second reading, though, it seemed a really profound choice.
ReplyDeleteYou may well mean something separate by "place of the rose" and "heart of the rose," but if you're not playing John Donne/ Charles Williams here, I think the poem ends on "mystery." The last stanza doesn't add anything I can identify.
Overall, I love the sound and pacing of this, and the economy with which these few words tell a story that I don't find myself puzzled at. I also find interesting that after "mother found," mother is not mentioned anymore; the roses are about father.
-Anonymous Sage Poet Well Qualified to be Leaving Comments