FOR HE IS AN ORCHID

FOR HE IS AN ORCHID

 

FOR HE IS AN ORCHID

 

It’s midwinter,

the daffodil bulbs we planted stick up like swords

“Son, come in from outside,

there’s nothing to see in my garden this time of year,”

“But Father,” I reply,

“I am imagining the garden ablaze with colour

You can’t rob me of my imagination

in my garden of projection,

where magic spells and mythic tales

conjure women washing by wishing wells,

“Wait”, Father tells me,

 “.. wait until the daffodils come out next Spring.

But for now let’s go for a drive together, down by the river”

 

“Where are we going, Father?

I don’t recognise this stretch of river”

In the distance,

two lighthouses,

one on each bank

I know exactly where I am

 

I walk to where the river meets the sea

You cannot see the sea from there,

only imagine it

I pass one of the lighthouses

A poster reads:THE MOST ROMANTIC LIGHTHOUSE’

I learn that it is the lighthouse in the tale The Snow Goose

A man lives alone in a lighthouse

He tends birds and nurses an injured goose

When war comes, he sails to rescue others and does not return

Years later, the goose comes back, injured again

What a kindly empath the lighthouse man is

I ask myself,

“if love is the most dangerous illusion,

can anyone have too much hope in their hands?

 

 

 

It’s now early April  

The garden is alive with rows of daffodils

 Eligible suitors wearing lime green suits,

pretty white scarves and yellow chapeaux

“Is there one daffodil you particularly want to pick?”, Father asks

“No” I reply, “for he is an orchid”

“And you are a tired looking lily”, Father says

 “Put down your imagination son.

Everything will still be beautiful tomorrow”.

 

James Baldwin writes:

‘If I love you I must make you conscious of the things you cannot see’

Indeed, illusion and what the mind can’t see

is threaded into the bark of my family tree

 

For yes I am a lily

Lee, a pruned deviation of my Scottish grandmama, Lily

Together with her husband Jock the magician and Lily as his graceful assistant,

they earned notoriety in the world of disappearing acts

in the music halls on Sauchiehall Street in 1950s Glasgow

 

In gay Polari slang,

the police are lily law

so tell me, how do these words hang:

Lily in her bikini, Jock with his saw?

 

One night their act went horribly wrong,

and the audience had to confront what they did see

Lily’s legs dangling out the end of a half-sawn box

 with her disembodied head looking dead as night

And her screaming husband waving his saw

“I’M A NUTTER WITH A CUTTER!”

 

This Easter, I’d rather not give an orchid an Easter egg

so I make the call:

“Please sir, are you a chocolatier

who can make magic and myth out of cocoa bean?”  

 

 

Three weeks later,

just in time for Easter,

a box is delivered

to a South American maker of myths

He opens the box to discover inside

the head of not beast, not man

but the tension between

the mystic, the sacred

and the saccharine

Inside is the head of a minotaur

carved out of chocolate

with a note attached with:

For an orchid x

 

 

In Father’s garden, I throw a penny in

to the wishing well and watch it sink

Later, a sculptor’s words get under my skin

They sharpen my sight and make me think

 

And not just his words but his prosthetic hands

stitch wonderlands inside of me  

Who would have thought an orchid understands

how to take the salt out of the sea?

 

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