The beets are always disappointing.
I dream of beets densely red and robust,
beets that have weight to them,
beets that take effort to slice.
But this year, again, they are small,
puny, even, though there are a lot of them.
I suppose a better gardener would research
nitrogen and potassium and how to best amend.
I suppose a better Buddhist would not complain.
But I am not a Buddhist. And I am no great gardener,
just a woman with a bit of dirt to play in.
They say that Beethoven, when he could hear,
would ask people in the audience to give him a tune.
And someone would hum for him, or whistle,
and he’d play the tune back and then improvise
variations on their theme. What tune
am I whistling for the master? A song
of paucity? Of ingratitude?
And how might it carry on, one variation
after another? This began just a little whine,
or so I thought, a little melody for more.
But who is master of this score? Oh woman
who sees the glass half empty, do you really
still believe that there’s a glass? Don’t you see,
this is not a poem about beets?
It’s about the way small things can last.
The beets are always disappointing.
I dream of beets densely red and robust,
beets that have weight to them,
beets that take effort to slice.
But this year, again, they are small,
puny, even, though there are a lot of them.
I suppose a better gardener would research
nitrogen and potassium and how to best amend.
I suppose a better Buddhist would not complain.
But I am not a Buddhist. And I am no great gardener,
just a woman with a bit of dirt to play in.
They say that Beethoven, when he could hear,
would ask people in the audience to give him a tune.
And someone would hum for him, or whistle,
and he’d play the tune back and then improvise
variations on their theme. What tune
am I whistling for the master? A song
of paucity? Of ingratitude?
And how might it carry on, one variation
after another? This began just a little whine,
or so I thought, a little melody for more.
But who is master of this score? Oh woman
who sees the glass half empty, do you really
still believe that there’s a glass? Don’t you see,
this is not a poem about beets?
It’s about the way small things can last.
A mobius strip of a poem. Very clever. At first I thought you’d fallen asleep at the keyboard, then by the end I saw your wily ways. It is what it is not.