Monarch
Days
Karen Hawkins
University
of British Columbia
 |
Photo
credits—Janet Elliott
|
When
I was a child I searched
The
wild fields by the side of the dirt road
That
wound its rutted way through cow pastures
Past
summer days of
Dust
and heat and grass
Spent
hours looking for milkweeds
Home
to the exquisite yellow, black and white striped creatures
That
dined exclusively on the sticky bitter milk of their
leaves
Spent
more hours watching them patiently chew
Those
summer days away
Before
the winds picked up the nose-biting chill of fall
Or
more than a hint of the impossible brilliance to come
Had
painted its way onto the trees along the fence row
I
knew summer was cresting
When
the striped pyjamas disappeared and in their stead,
If
you were very lucky,
You’d
find the waxy caves of impossibly delicate green
Crowned
with impossibly tiny nuggets of finest gold
In
which my summer fellows laid themselves down
I’d
visit my waxen treasures
Watch
as they slowly lost their opalescence
Turned
dark and faintly sinister
Hinted
at something mysterious and painful and beautiful
Tried
to catch the moment when the protective shell
Could
no longer hold the transformation it had nurtured
Became
too sheer, too brittle, insufficient
When
curiosity got the best of those who watched and those
who waited
And
something new, something blackly velvet, still packed
tight
Would
pull itself into the world again, wetly vulnerable
Inflate
tightly wadded wings with sour blood no bird would
taste
Hold
them up to the world unfurled to harden into windsails
And
launch themselves into that world
Colour
the air with rhythmic strokes of black veined orange
Was
one of those strong beats, delicate though it seemed,
The
last gust of air needed to fuel a hurricane somewhere?
They
stayed long enough to gather strength
Before
beating their way to Southern coasts
To
winter in other summer lands
Fulfilling
their turn of the generational spiral
Making
trees heavy with the accumulation of their light wings
Leaving
me to watch as gold and crimson stained the world
As
milkpods burst and downy parachutes scattered seeds
to the wind
In
a red sweater, with snowflake pattern
I’d
visit the scene of next year’s drama
Find
hints of discarded wrappings
Shredded
under leaves, now withering too
In
preparation for a winter’s respite
Knowing
school was around the corner
And
that it would be the interlude until the next time
Summer
filled the world with
Monarch
days
About the Author
Karen Hawkins
is a graduate student with the University of British
Columbia's Centre for the Study of Curriculum and
Instruction. Following undergraduate work at Queen's
University, Karen taught English, Drama, Math and
Science in Ontario schools before moving to Vancouver
and taking a post with the B.C. School Trustees Association.
She is currently the Senior Director, Board
Development for the Association.