August 22, 2024
1189: Nature Poem About Flowers by Matthew Rohrer
August 22, 2024
1189: Nature Poem About Flowers by Matthew Rohrer
Transcript
I’m Major Jackson, and this is The Slowdown.
In my early twenties, I rocked a gaucho look: sombrero cordobés and duster like Zorro. Then I had this black leather and jeans thing going on. Then, I got a job in the corporate office of Urban Outfitters; so I eased into sporting oxford shirts underneath blue blazers. They say clothes make the man. Frequently though, clothes hide the person, particularly a person’s depth of feeling. Today’s poem explores what states of being we transmit, or do not transmit, when we step out of our house.
Nature Poem About Flowers
by Matthew Rohrer
Looking back at photographs our clothes were enormous draped across our shoulders hanging low off our hips like they were someone else’s and they were usually someone’s old flannel it is clear we didn’t care or that we had different goals for our clothes I remember one night at the National Arts Club B. seemed truly shocked he said I always pegged you as kind of a bohemian but look at you in that suit it wasn’t unexpected I drifted through the reading nursing some very old wounds acting like I was paying attention there was somewhere else I was dreaming about the dappled and shifting light of a forest in a book where the air was cool and smelled like imaginary flowers and then we were applauding and outside on the sidewalk the city trembled and glowed and we all felt it beckon when F. pulled a purple chunk of opium from his vest at the bottom of tall streets at Union Square a flowery veil descended this was when the city would wink at us like it liked us or I thought approved of us and when we went to the movies the actors were dressed like us and one night it was the night before I quit a lousy job I had to get up and walk it off and when I looked down at my clothes under a streetlight I saw they were all brown everything I was wearing and I heard the phrase glad rags said by someone else inside my head but also I remembered the grown-ups used to talk under their breath about one of the older kids how there was something wrong with him it was obvious because he only wore brown and the elders nodded yes the elders nodded wisely and I guess I didn’t care because all in brown I stepped out onto the avenue —where spring sounded its high notes and the blue air was perfumed by all the flowering trees that people who don’t live here don’t believe in, the dogwoods the redbuds, magnolias —and I sneezed and the avenue was lit up like the deck of a ship in the morning I would quit my demeaning job but first where the electricity flowed unimpeded I too wished to flow in my glad rags through the streets of flowering night and when I returned home all the rooms were dark and S. seemed asleep I quietly slipped out of my enormous shapeless clothes and opened an ancient book trying once again but without success to live inside it never coming out except at night to finally persuade S. that we could survive that way that we could live forever inside of books and she said she could agree to part-time and I said fine and we both returned to the dreamy dark that surrounds us but that we don’t share with anyone and I dreamed I quit my job by waving a sunflower at my boss who had no power over the natural world and when I woke up I thought that’s not a dream that’s just true
“Nature Poem About Flowers” by Matthew Rohrer from ARMY OF GIANTS © 2024 Matthew Rohrer. Used by permission of the poet and Wave Books.