You have sweet flowers for your pleasure;
You laugh with the bountiful earth
In its richness of summer treasure:
Where now are your flowers and your mirth?
Petals and cadenced laughter,
Each in a dying fall,
Droop out of life; and after
Is nothing; they were all.
But we from the death of roses
That three suns perfume and gild
With a kiss, till the fourth discloses
A withered wreath, have distilled
The fulness of one rare phial,
Whose nimble life shall outrun
The circling shadow on the dial,
Outlast the tyrannous sun.
This poem is in the public domain.
My father read a mountain aloud.
Opened to a page
where a green bird lands on a thunderclap.
Named for the billowing hands of
brittle blue flowers.
As if the unfinished poetry of the paraffin
is pulled aside like scenery,
so that I may write by the only light I know.
My father read only his one life and recited
the last line over and over.
The book is written in giant letters of fog
that wander like goats across the alpine pastures.
The moon is dog-eared as if the treetops looking up
have studied the idea of love too much.
On a page with some scattered pine needles,
a voice goes on calling out to me.
My father learned to read
in a one-room schoolhouse,
and never read a poem.
A little herd of lightning
gets spoken out loud in the dark.
Change
is scenic and sudden.
One year, I came home
and all the leaves fell off my father.
After that,
he was winter.
Copyright © 2025 by Hua Xi. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on October 1, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.