
Picnic, Lightning
It is possible to be struck by a
meteor or a single-engine
plane while
reading in a chair at home. Pedestrians
are flattened by safes
falling from
rooftops mostly within the panels of
the comics, but still,
we know it is
possible, as well as the flash of
summer lightning, the
thermos toppling
over, spilling out on the grass.
And we know the message
can be
delivered from within. The heart, no
valentine, decides to quit
after
lunch, the power shut off like a
switch, or a tiny dark ship
is
unmoored into the flow of the body's
rivers, the brain a
monastery,
defenseless on the shore. This is
what I think about when I
shovel
compost into a wheelbarrow, and when
I fill the long flower boxes,
then
press into rows the limp roots of red
impatiens -- the instant hand
of Death
always ready to burst forth from the
sleeve of his voluminous
cloak. Then
the soil is full of marvels, bits of
leaf like flakes off a
fresco,
red-brown pine needles, a beetle quick
to burrow back under the
loam. Then
the wheelbarrow is a wilder blue, the
clouds a brighter white,
and all I
hear is the rasp of the steel edge
against a round stone, the
small
plants singing with lifted faces, and
the click of the sundial as
one hour
sweeps into the next.
~ Billy Collins
~
(Picnic,
Lightning)
(left button to play, right button
to save)