Swallowtail
January 5, 1996
In my dream last night
our glass-jarred chrysalis
hatched huge and unwieldy,
and your ten-year-old fingers
fashioned bright splints of balsa
to prop up its wings.
Now, as the world wakes,
you cry out
that the pearled green lobe
is finally darkening to life.
You lie barely breathing on the grass
in the slow seep of dew,
custodial,
watching the pulsing thorax
slide free of its milky husk.
Witnesses
of another winged birth,
we watch these crumpled rag-wings,
night wings, neon-dusted,
stretch to taut velvet,
shore up the air beneath them,
and lift, lift
to enter the shifting clouds
as truth enters a dream.