swan song of the saucer magnolia

by Craig Constantine



1.

Love at last sight,

Valedictorian of the first.

 

The eyes of experience,

Elegiacally taking their leave.

And the eyes of innocence,

Waking up to the erotic.

 

The saucer magnolia tenders its blooms.

The neighborhood swoons.

Dogwalkers stop in their tracks

Even cars slow, and drivers gawk,

At this roseate effusion,

This riot of pink flesh.

 

“Your tree . . .” they stammer.

At first sight, they cannot summon the words

That at farewell, flower.

 

2.

These goblets of pure and prurient complexion,

The pastels you dream in the womb.

The pink curtain of the cervix as it raises

On the panic and passion play.

The velveteen robe of blood

Exchanged for the porcelain white of linen

That is the frail badge for all that’s chaste.

For the wimple of the nun’s habit is the inner petal,

As the dress of the seductress is the outer face.


The pink mists and purple bruises of the fistfights

When I defended my brother or myself

From the bloodbath of bullies.

The glint of lip gloss on the tomboy girl.

The bubblegum breath of the mouth as it parts

And leans in for the first time.

The alabaster of tanline, and the blush of the aureole.

Each bloom a chromosphere of coming-of-age.

 

The corsages of all the girls at the proms I never went to.

The tassels of the graduations I never made.

The blood moons I saw on all the lost highways.

The auroras that night, sleeping rough,

Sky blooming with soundless lightning

Of boundless shades of violet and incarnadine.

The boutonnieres of all the ring bearers and best men.

The tulle and organza of generations of brides,

The casket sprays of our beloved, and ourselves.

 

My Persian Sand ’60 Cadillac,

Blasting Love Shack and Fast Car.

Punkettes at Al’s Bar and The Rainbow.

Leatherette VIPs at the Viper Room.

Power-suited women at their starmaking desks.

The dazzling girl in the snow-bunny sweater

In the conference room, full stop.

Salmon sushi of our third date.

Sunset over the Maasai Mara on our honeymoon.

The face cocooned in the linens that mirrored my own.

 

3.

We are no strangers to immoderate color.

Bougainvillea blazes on every other corner

Like all the Spanish royalty of The Prado.

But this is nude Olympia in the Paris Salon.

Perverse to those first eyes, and now to ours.

The level gaze, the courtesan’s choker, the cupped hand.

The bared white skin, the shrouded black.

 

4.

Come March, the flesh turns papery,

Like a corsage pressed into a yearbook.

The top-heavy goblets droop,

And disrobe.  Shrugging off their petals

Like all the tulle of the brides of June.

 

Long shot, that I will see it bloom again.

My dead brothers and sister daily flood

My neural and vascular inboxes

With reminders that I am past their time, and mine.

Each forbidden glass foretells the last.

Death has kissed me more times than I care to name.

Soon enough, the lurid consummation.

 

5.

But let these words be a letter in a secret box,

Passed in fumbling hands from desk to desk.

For what chaste and indecent epiphanies await,

To see the pink passion of the saucer magnolia once more

With the eyes of another year?



Photo of Craig Constantine

BIO: Craig Constantine has been a day laborer, bread baker, furniture mover, factory worker, and TV producer. Now a poet, his hardest, worst-paid, best job.. His poems are drifting like his younger self, now in the UK, now in the US, now in Australia. He has just been named Editor-at-Large for Poetries In English.

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