Linnaeus
in Lapland
"She, the cause of his hard trial
Is also his reward." Ovid
Ever the Prince of Flowers, though foot-sore
from the trek over glaciers; though he bloodied
his shins on the ice-glazed bogs in mile
upon mile of benumbed slogging; though
the North Wind filled the sails of his linsey-
woolsey cape, then drove his body rolling like
a musket ball over the snowfields. And when (O
for wings! ) he was swilled down rapids, his skiff,
pod-thin for ease of portage, splitting in the force,
hatching all his stuffed and stitched-up waterfowl
upon the current full-fledged. Weak from unsalted
salmon whose mouths frothed with maggots, and stream-water
dimpling with larvae: finally he reaches
the Lapland valleys, where he drinks sweet milk
again, and can sit on a chair; and though the myriad
flowers unordered and unfamilied seem
a genealogic feat beyond his strength, he works
all day and under the midnight sun
with his spyglass and flower press, collecting
paragons for his herbarium, his sleeves,
though worn, still flaunting their linings of red shalloon.
Its July; the height of the short summer; every day
teems with nuptials like a marriage palace; with
metamorphoses; with the never-before-named.
He resurrects a world of Nymphs, Danaids,
Muses, restoring them to their aerial kingdom
while their deep tongued kisses muss
the full-blown bridal beds. All is swoon for our
conservator of myth, who kneels before
a marshland blossom, and taking the down-turned
face in his hand, notes how shes bound
to the tuft of leaves. And with a mind hovering
on associative wings, he unchains
the virgin from anonymity: and names
his own Andromeda.
Cardinal
His brushed-graphite, wiry clutches
gripping and ungripping the telephone line,
he stretched out his throat, unfurled his crest
as if in prelude to a tart philippic, then
turned his jaunty profile toward the west
so that the retiring sun struck full against his beak
and flashed at me - a minute, gold-
electroplated semaphore. Such a satin surface
and nugget density it had;
the diminutive, fine-crafted jaws (those
of a jewelers pliers) when they opened,
soloed forth spring-song
with its ideal instrument: a silver mallet
pinged against the driving wedge, scoring
the tree buds stippling the dusk
behind him. And I, who feel
my throat swell closed at sunsets
unmanageable fires looked up
to him, the small and self-important
maestro of eventide
who set his metronome to turn-flash and
tick out in precise degrees how brilliant
light diminishes. He counterpoints the night.
Bio Note
Karen Holmberg was raised in Connecticut on the Long Island Sound. She
holds an MFA from the University of California-Irvine and a Masters Degree
in Slavic Languages and Literatures from the University of Southern
California. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in such magazines as
The Paris Review, Slate and The Nation. She was a 1996 winner of the
Discovery/The Nation Award, and her book, The Perseids, won the 2000 Vassar
Miller Prize and is forthcoming from the University of Missouri Press in
Spring of 2001.
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