Flower


Half-Cent's-Worth


I, the Half-Century Plant
knock, ring, call, shout...
for time and terns fly south,
and my Half-Century
ends...about now.
Blossoming, I wail
of tight-lipped accountants
and footbound words,
limping angrily, blearily out among you;
I, the Half-Century Plant,
sing in operatic desperation,
my own ears to fill.

This is the note of the Half-Century Plant, beeping softly to alert you to the debut of its bloom: scent have I none, yet scented fly wordless am I, wellspoken, soulless open I my soul and rootless fling a tap to Earth, into the ground which binds me; I am the eating mammal and the later worm; (Who gets the bird?) I am the scent of what I might have been and the root of all to come; open and awake, and I will fill thy mind with scatgun nonsense fill thine eyes with naked black pour into thy ears the soundless torrent of a million toothy tongues.

I am the Half-Century Plant: How Do you Do? And how do I? And why?

Hurry up, please; it's whithering.


©  Copyright, 1999; Malcolm Beckett


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