Poem 237 ± January 27, 2016

Benjamin Garcia
Valentine in Two Parts

I.
He worked in a nursery, but went home
to a house painted green. Doves came

to nest in soil pots; garden snakes
ate the eggs. There was the occasional lump

of pink mice piled atop the hard dog food, right
before the mother dashed away, a newborn

in her mouth (the rest served up to the dog).
It was in his yard that I first saw guilt flash,

echolalic, upon the inward eye
like mustard smeared on a shirt.

All those dandelions looked at first
like spilt sunshine. Taken in

like a breath without thought.
To sigh is to step on a flower;

to flower is to open wide.
What I remember best is this:

a kind of valentine;
where the calla stamen should be

a fountain pen
shoved in the throat of a lily.

II.
The jay’s territorial quarrel
is not a sonnet.

After an afternoon of rain,
it stops. The afternoon, I mean,

because the rain goes on,
until we awaken, Easter lilies in mud.

The birds are asleep and the flowers
unbedded. No need to correct the stems

as we walk the yard. He turns and I thumb
his mouth in the dark, the isosceles triangle

of his upper lip, cleft chin. A space left
for difference, meaning where corruptions are,

as certain tulip breeds grow feather-fringed
or break like a wine glass because of a virus.

It’s strange what can be beautiful
to the human eye—a bullet hole

punched clean through—

 

Benjamin GarciaBenjamin Garcia is a CantoMundo fellow who received his MFA from Cornell University. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in: Gulf Coast, Kenyon Review Online, As/Us, West Branch Wired, PANK, and The Collagist. He works for a non-profit as a Community Health Specialist providing HIV/HCV/STD prevention education and testing to higher risk communities throughout the Finger Lakes region of New York State.

This poem appeared in West Branch Wired.