A balmy early March afternoon on Smith

College campus. The liberal conservatory

Is holding its glorious annual Spring Bulb Show,

which draws the usual droves of floral enthusiasts

And sensual connoisseurs, as evidenced by

The endless line of vehicles

Parked on the ordinarily carless street.

Inside the rustic ivy-cloaked greenhouse,

Hundreds ponder the stunning loveliness

Of various hyacinths, crocuses, irises

And flowering cacti, studying their Latin titles

As they wholesomely inhale perfumed halos

And enchanting stenches galore.

While I too appreciate a good bulb show,

Right now I prefer the more or less

Untouched view and purview of an old

Unpainted bench overlooking the happily twinkling pond.

Bodies of lights, schools of flickers, migrating constellations,

Fluttering iterations of italicized light-play:

Just a smattering of my lyrical confections

For the indescribable ballet of agile wattage

Gracing the water with every mild wind.

Inside the conservatory the bulb show is in full swing:

A regalia of botanical elegance

Arranged fastidiously by a few green thumbs,

Inducing appreciative “oohs” and “aahs”

From the bulbous and giddy pilgrims,

such as the kind heard at a fireworks display;

But the array of radiance and reassurance

Yielded by the chemistry between sunrays

And pond-flesh, choreographed by no human

wand or hand, is the kind of furtive,

intangible magic I prefer on this balmy

Early March afternoon on a bench just out of reach

From the sighing, snapshotting throng.

 

Connolly Ryan is a senior lecturer at UMass Amherst Honors College. You can contact him at connollyryanpi@hotmail.com.