Giverny
By Ian Pople
Summer dust settled over the garden
in bloom and full of bees, their hives
full of such marketable honey, you
bought a jar. Then, amid the light blue
and white of the ground floor, there was
the lemon-yellow room and the room
in two pale blues with a Hiroshige carp
and a falcon, its talons folded under
because the hands were difficult, though
worked on over some days, and the neck
difficult, the edges of the object fleeing
toward the horizon, fleeing the unity
of flesh and (that word again!) spirit; so,
perhaps it was easier to leave the eyes out
altogether, as in the small Cézanne upstairs,
where the face is wide and slightly empty.
The features caught in the shadow of an
overhang. Outside the leaves fell from bamboo
in the Japanese water garden, leaves that
gathered light gray stripes upon light green stripes
and the stream that ran between pinioned banks,
as if we had opened a desk marked by all
who had used it, who had slept in its dust,
who had slept in the dew in the summer.
Source: Poetry (June 2020)