I pick one flower
a perfectly red hibiscus
place the plucked end in water
hoping it will drink and
stay with me for a while
stay alive though I know
the picking will shorten its time
has already changed its fate
from coquette to languid beauty.
Longevity is hardly the question now.
Perhaps there is no question.
There is only this looking, looking
this small remorse that I have interfered
this sigh for my clumsy human flesh
that steps on grasslings
leaves footprints in pink sand
in mud
picks a hibiscus
and only then remembers
that fate surprises us
picks us from our bush
our limb
so I place this perfect blossom
behind my ear
its bawdy pollen-laden stamen
observing me
from the corner of my eye:
here we go together
stepping out
to see what we can see.