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Autumn Leaves Marilyn Chin

 

The dead piled up, thick, fragrant, on the fire escape.
My mother ordered me again, and again, to sweep it clean.
All that blooms must fall. I learned this not from the Tao,
but from high school biology.

Oh, the contradictions of having a broom and not a dustpan!
I swept the leaves down, down through the iron grille
and let the dead rain over the Wong family’s patio.

And it was Achilles Wong who completed the task.
We called her:
The-one-who-cleared-away-another-family’s-autumn.
She blossomed, tall, benevolent, notwithstanding.

From The Phoenix Gone, the Terrace Empty
Copyright © 1994 by Marilyn Chin
Reprinted with the permission of Milkweed Editions

 
 


Back to Poetry in Motion® ~ Poem list for 1997