Mulberry trees are a big part of my childhood memories, the taste and stain of them, the way their delicateness bursts in your mouth. And their tight-bunched shape, darkening from green to red to black with ripeness. I've rarely ever seen them afterwards.
Mulberries
You traced this simple gesture with your hand:
you raised it to your face,
you stretched it towards my window,
as I was driving: I looked,
and against the hazy morning
light I counted them:
eight, eight mulberries with outspread branches
like the tail of a stuffed peacock,
a procession along the line
of our gaze, so perfect
that for a moment I forgot
time-tables and connections
and I slowed down to comprehend
how one might say of eight trees in a row,
'Look, how beautiful!' just as you said,
even if they had not decided to be that way, how everything
might just be a chain of senseless alternation,
and how a gesture of the hand and a smile
are enough to make, out of eight trees
in a row, an illusion of redemption.
Massimo Gezzi, Excerpts from 'The Moment After'
Translated from the Italian by Damiano Abeni and Moira Egan
Mulberries
You traced this simple gesture with your hand:
you raised it to your face,
you stretched it towards my window,
as I was driving: I looked,
and against the hazy morning
light I counted them:
eight, eight mulberries with outspread branches
like the tail of a stuffed peacock,
a procession along the line
of our gaze, so perfect
that for a moment I forgot
time-tables and connections
and I slowed down to comprehend
how one might say of eight trees in a row,
'Look, how beautiful!' just as you said,
even if they had not decided to be that way, how everything
might just be a chain of senseless alternation,
and how a gesture of the hand and a smile
are enough to make, out of eight trees
in a row, an illusion of redemption.
Massimo Gezzi, Excerpts from 'The Moment After'
Translated from the Italian by Damiano Abeni and Moira Egan
Larkin never used the mower again after killing the hedgehog.
ReplyDeleteUnlike you I never tasted a mulberry in childhood, but every year now we eat our fill of mulberries in a local castle gardens in Wales.