“The Visionaries” [a poem by a friend]

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“Diana” by Augustus Saint-Gaudens; photo by Pete Finneran 2000. Image courtesy of Brookgreen Museum.
http://www.brookgreen.org


A poem by Beejay Grob © 2013


The Visionaries


We too had seen the gardens

sculpted by every season now.

A significant collective ‘we’–

myself, and practically anyone

I could target; one-by-one,

rain, autumn, winter night.


The family album holds each

posing sandwiched on a tailgate

flocked outside the aviary;

all standing straight as statues,

shot by the granite Pegasus.

Everyone except you, Muse.


Beneath a hospitality of waving

palmettos, feathering Carolina skies

from here to Charleston,

the stone-silent Visionaries

lean in from their perch,

reflecting in their secret oracle.


I took a stab at it when Orion

hung low over midnight oaks,

a carved moon enlightening Anna:

Why so many huntresses?

I determined her quivering gifts

sighted monumental occasions.


Walk among the springtime

blooms, the lubbers mating openly,

or in summer’s dead heat–

count the times she made a point

to cast herself as Diana,

the female Archer.


~ ~ ~


National Poetry Month, 2013. Many thanks to Beejay Grob, who wrote the poem and who introduced me to the beauty of Brookgreen Gardens in spring.


Brookgreen Plantation and Sculpture Gardens, Myrtle Beach SC



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Published on April 13, 2013 11:47
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