Concord
at leaf lift, fat fruit falling
to hand, bubble-headed bird
secrets glass-blown
hard seed heart, tongue-crushed
sweet bloom-end narcissi, sugar holding
scent-heavy fence brambler,
branch brawny shoulders,
twiggy hands, mouth of its violet
kiss—or even darker, a velvet sheen
pearl or nacre first snow-
gleam glove-cleared, rubbed,
thumb-polished, this
untended flower mouth bee-stung
berry, this love honey tumble
sweet thicket, autumnal
tendril, unmeditated
yield; this nonetheless late gleaning,
a transcendental century
and a half hence its cold Massachusetts
roots, declension of vitis Labrusca,
black fox grape the native wilding,
frontier now of my tillage, my
viticulture, my clean Ball jars,
my Northern thrift, my lyric
husbandry—plump bushels all this unbroken
afternoon sheared from vine and cane:
swoon plummy and beguiled
into my marveling palms—
Copyright © 2007 by Lisa Bickmore. This poem appeared in Hunger Mountain Review, Fall 2007, Issue 11. Used with permission of the author.