Still Life with Bouquet, Golden Spade (out of frame)
Jennifer Packer, Say Her Name, 2017, oil on canvas, 48 x 40
“I paint flowers so they will not die.”
—Frida Kahlo
we be bouquets, be green, leaves
ethereal, be wildweeds, be lamb’s-quarter, be day
-flowers’ cool blue, be hue busting
up bleak blur. we evening primrose, morning
glory and larkspur, left-bent like sunlight
thru hickory shagbark, schooled in all the ways
of the soil, the ways of lowdirt. we the garden and the gold
-en spade used to dig. we the tiny lurking mantis
veiled in verdure, praying underblade. lately it seems
all there is to do is wait. and wait we will. we out
-will winter, bide out the gnaw of blight strikes, we outroot
the storm’s walled eye, our spine-stems straight, sepals
unsnapped, petals parted but unshed. we hardy anthurium,
philodendron, monstera, we sing silky with cordiform
tongues sweating rosin, we bleed. we blood. we
be bloodied as thorns, we be blushed as trumpet
lily, as Damask rose. things of beauty—we.
we the bolls survived the gin, we the clouds
in our own sky, the birds too. we be dandelion,
be red jasmine, be jazz. we flush
just once, like sweet four o’ clock in June, buds
unfist for a foreday’s bloom. we hear
sorry swoons: “how lovely. how quick they die. Die
so soon.”
Note: this poetic form is a riff on Terrance Hayes’ Golden Shovel, which takes the last word of each of its lines from a Brooks poem—this Golden Spade uses the words from Brooks’ “We Real Cool” progressively later in each line to create a diagonal throughline.