![]() Rogue Russets
Surprised by a frill of white flower where I'd never planted an eye, I decided to fence it with sticks and let the renegade live in undoctored soil where the garden gave way to volunteer poplars and acidic white pine. Why not? After all, away from the tribe, in clay where beetles drill and weeds emerge inspired, it might grow eccentric, proliferate and thrive. When autumn air said disinter, to fill the bin for winter, I troweled under and pulled the stem until a rabble of rough spuds red as Etruscan urns emerged as if to prove that whatever urge drove the rogue to sow itself and strive beyond all cultivation might offer a vital lesson to any apostate instinct aspiring to survive. From Volume 180, Number 5, August 2002 Copyright © The Poetry Foundation |