Read

"Paradise"

Published:
December 14, 2023
September 4, 2023
Read "Paradise", a poem about nature and man — and the special connection shared between the two.|Read "Paradise", a poem about nature and man — and the special connection shared between the two.

On a thousand wings they came
to that bent and blasted pear tree,
the slender joints of all their legs and long antennae
bending gently on the saturated air,
tasting in their strangely insect ways
the same sweet-sour promise of fallen fruit
that drew us children to the tree
on feet of flesh and bone,
on feet all stained with dust and sweat
and unafraid of stinging things
despite the red and blue and
black and yellow stripes and barbs
and biting parts of the gathered
wasps that glittered on the ground
there, beneath a roof of drooping leaves;

It was a cradle of things
we had been taught to fear,
but in that warm abundance of the air
we learned a mutual peace,
us, and the wasps, and pinstriped
soldier flies with round red eyes, and bees,
and butterflies that with their wings were painting
the scene of summer armistice
in flags of orange and yellow and green
and black; perhaps half the butterflies were black
at that house, living little books of night
lacquered with splashes of blue-green glaze
and galaxied with small white stars
sparkling on their flitting pages;

Green and black
and orange and brown and red and gray
and dusty purple like the low dark clouds on an
almost-stormy day
and yellow and white
with spots and bars and eyes
all blinking, a turmoil of eyes
that gazed between the wings
as if in imitation of the cherubim.

We gathered under the pear tree there
and gnawed half-ripened fruit
still green but sweet and sticky,
and threw the bitten cores on the teeming ground;
and we were not afraid of God, and all the
creatures thick with eyes and wings
had put away their swords,
and the air was thick with a cider smell
and heavy with the sound
of all those wings,

And all the little things on which those
flickering pinions were fitted crept
across the smooth hemispheres of rotten fruit,
slow in the abundant air,
and happy,
full and happy and
so drunk they had been gentled
and forgotten how to sting
or fight; they sipped their cider side by side
and rolled across the ground
unable to fly;

Because of this I dream of paradise
like a pear tree,
bark blasted and black and
the earth underneath uneven with rotten fruit
and a smell like booze and vinegar
and honey thick in the air;
I dream of wasps and flies and butterflies
with black wings,
and dust on all our feet,
streaked with sweat and stepping
unafraid but careful through the teeming peace,

I dream of lips sticky with nectar and the heat
and the smell of rotten fruit
and the hum and murmur of bees
and hornets fanning their wings,
I dream of paradise like this;
I have seen it,
when in its time there was enough for all,
so much sweetness the air was thick
with a rotten stink of it;
that is the smell to me
of paradise.

Creators:
Reuben Kendall
Published:
December 14, 2023
September 4, 2023
On a related note...
Guaranteed Ways to Make Someone Smile Today

Guaranteed Ways to Make Someone Smile Today

Martha Reilly

Meditating on the Magic of Belonging

Meditating on the Magic of Belonging

Hanna Van Elk

Good and Decent EP 15: Occupation Proclamations

Good and Decent EP 15: Occupation Proclamations

Grotto

4 Tips for Staying Joyful in a World that Glorifies Stress

4 Tips for Staying Joyful in a World that Glorifies Stress

Molly Gettinger

This Café is Preserving and Celebrating Native Culture

This Café is Preserving and Celebrating Native Culture

Grotto

What I Believe About the Things I Tell Myself

What I Believe About the Things I Tell Myself

Anna White

Artist Brings Beauty to Skid Row

Artist Brings Beauty to Skid Row

Grotto

Blessed Chiara Badano Sets an Example We All Can Follow

Blessed Chiara Badano Sets an Example We All Can Follow

Katie Faley

Family of Piñata Artists Shows Resilience

Family of Piñata Artists Shows Resilience

Grotto

The Facts You've Never Heard About Climate Change

The Facts You've Never Heard About Climate Change

Martha Reilly

Why I'm Catholic: It's True

Why I'm Catholic: It's True

Grotto

How a Program is Restoring Ecosystems and Cultivating Unity

How a Program is Restoring Ecosystems and Cultivating Unity

Kelly Sankowski

Random Acts of Kindness for Every Situation

Random Acts of Kindness for Every Situation

Mary Claire Lagroue

Women Find Healing Through Kintsugi Workshop

Women Find Healing Through Kintsugi Workshop

Grotto

Palm Sunday Spotify Playlist | #GrottoMusic

Palm Sunday Spotify Playlist | #GrottoMusic

Grotto

Text Adventure Game Represents Disability

Text Adventure Game Represents Disability

Grotto

Meatless Friday Recipe: Enchilada Casserole

Meatless Friday Recipe: Enchilada Casserole

Grotto

How Live Music Can Inspire Our Imagination

How Live Music Can Inspire Our Imagination

Grace Spiewak

9 Items That Should Be in Every Woman's Closet After Graduation

9 Items That Should Be in Every Woman's Closet After Graduation

Lillian Fallon

St. Kateri Tekakwitha Spotify Playlist | #GrottoMusic

St. Kateri Tekakwitha Spotify Playlist | #GrottoMusic

Grotto

newsletter

We’d love to be pals.

Sign up for our newsletter, and we’ll meet you in your inbox each week.