Poetry, Week 17: Emily Updegraff

 

Green Reigns

                                                                                                                                                                          

The sky is breathing hard and each gust 
brings a shower of papery discs 
shed by the giant elm. They litter the lawn, 
form drifts at the curb. I pick at weeds
while he prunes the boxwoods. 
We deadhead daffodils. Tough love, he says. 
Meanwhile, green reigns. Firm, Lilliputian 
buds are on the dogwood, lilac, hydrangea. 
In the hemlock and yews, a new brightness
at each terminus.  

These months have strained like rain 
on a gargoyle, carefully shaped sandstone 
rendered unrecognizable. He still looks 
at me with pleasure, but we are changing again.
It’s not settling into some state of nature. 
It’s what comes after gray days when the sound 
of me dropping a knife and the tone of his voice
put us each on edge, after the things we’ve said. 
Not even they are forever. In this glorious re-greening 
something comes next for us, too.

 

Emily Updegraff is an MFA student at Northwestern University and has published poems in Third Wednesday, The Orchards Poetry Journal, River and South Poetry Review, and other journals. She works as a university administrator and is a regular book review contributor at Great Lakes Review.