Baucis and Philemon

For the Day After Valentine’s Day

 

Dank February’s leavened

turf broods green stirrings, true, but now the glaze,

steel-bright, sun sheeted on our frosted yard

lured me outdoors past yesterday’s

bouquet and card,

 

your Valentine gift, poor             

compared with breathing roses our tight-trimmed

shrubs still withheld, I thought.  Then my dull tread

stopped cold—what was that distance-dimmed

blotch, glossy red,

 

swaying in a thick scraggle    

of brush, far-off, like a gash on the background,

a livid wound?  I tiptoed nearer.  Soon,  

eyes dazzled by gold script, I found

a red balloon

 

named “LOVE.”  Would Love, I wondered,      

freed to traverse great sky with dangling string

and view mosaic earth have evanesced

on our drab acre, weeks from spring?

Why pick, half guest,

 

half suppliant, our home?        

Your new bouquet, it slipped your hands and climbed  

drapes where it shyly teased such questions, bobbing

yes-no, yes-no—a heartbeat timed

to our hearts throbbing

 

for meaning in its coming—

were we, tucked in suburban sameness, hosting

in Dollar Store disguise some fallen star,

our bouncy, enigmatic lostling

an avatar?

 

Floating enrapt, we lost

day’s plan to an intoxicating sense

of being chosen, weightless helium

we breathed while opaque reticence

crept lower, mum.

 

Then night claimed our day-sleep,

and frost-white morning woke us to a shape-

less rubber membrane shriveled on the floor,

curled as though straining to escape

our too-firm door.

 

You pruned your bouquet later, 

I dry-mulched shrubs, each mulling why we thought

our strayed balloon was more than gravity

or Sunday luck or weather brought—

so buoyantly

 

named “LOVE,” so strangely drawn

to our oak-hidden lives it open-ended

a mundane day’s unpondered iteration,

so like a guest’s not unintended

visitation

 

disguised as the gold-lettered

balloon we hosted—even if it was-

-n’t Love come from blue emptiness of sky,

leaving a cloak so we would pause

and wonder why. 

Poet’s Note.  The legend of Baucis and Philemon is told in Book 8 of Ovid’s Metamorphoses.  Baucis and Philemon were a poor, elderly couple who lived in a village in Phrygia.  One evening two travelers knocked on their door and asked for a meal and lodging for the night, after having been turned away by every other neighbor in their village.  The old couple welcomed the travelers into their home with kindness and generosity.  The strangers then revealed themselves to be Jupiter and Mercury traveling among mortals in disguise.  To reward the old couple’s hospitality, their simple home was transformed into a temple, and they were granted their two wishes: to serve the gods as keepers of the temple and to die together.  On their death Baucis and Philemon were transformed into a linden and oak tree with intertwined roots as symbol of their eternal love. 

 

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