Poetry Aberdeen | Dead Good Poets

Wendy Morton


Wendy Morton

Poems


Luminous Storms

Not this Garden

Starfish


Not this Garden

Wendy Morton

Not the perfect beds
of love lies bleeding,
the bellflowers, heliotrope,
the poisonous foxglove.
Not a sound from the bells of Ireland
or the bee balm.
There is no wind here,
to bring the fragrance
of mirabilis, sweet rocket,
anise hyssop.

No.

I want disorder: death, wind, storm;
need this February garden by the sea:
the fine decay of maple leaves,
their opaque tracery,
rosehips, a heartbeat in winter,
and hemlock,
catching bleached seaweed
in its branches
and the moss hanging
on the north side of everything.

I want the sea's garden on the shore:
crab legs like magnolia petals,
mussel shells that hold the sky;
a broken plate ringed with cornflowers.

From this garden I watch
the cormorant open and close
its wings like a fan,
the heron skim the shore
and the raucous geese land.

I watch for wind,
for death, for spring,
taking slow, salty breaths.


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