Monday's poem

Natural history
By David Howard

when a youth impresses
his friends carry that impression
the way fruit does a bruise

the memory of fruit picking, cuffs
unbuttoned but not rolled up

birds are thirsty for Cox's Orange
swear words stick between the boy's teeth

the serpent hoards casual windfalls
there was never any intention etcetera

the gulf old hands call across
it's the width of the card table
where an apple moulders

morning star to brawling constellations
an orchid burns by the windbreak

sprawled over the tractor's bonnet
a black-eyed dog enters the metaphor

the boy is all fired up, he enjoys
this list which is a poem but also his summer

a plant is an animal
with its feet in the air,
its mouth in the ground


David Howard is a former pyrotechnics supervisor. He was the inaugural recipient of the New Zealand Society of Authors Mid-Career Writer's Award (2009) for work subsequently collected as The Incomplete Poems (Cold Hub Press, 2011). His poetry has been translated into six languages. He lives in Purakaunui.

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