The rain is falling, coalescing now Off the roof onto new blooms. Dusk slips in with its indigo shroud And I watch it kiss the purple, Of the Rhododendron’s earliest flower, Plucking away Azalea’s last veil, Hiding her into a bower,
Where summer never ends And the rain falls when it will; I would have this all year instead of an end Where these soft mists know nothing of a chill But heat and rain, Sun and shower.
I can still hear raindrops drumming On a Chinese rebel’s tin roof, Outside Jakarta and the red guard coming, We could lapse into hypnosis, Rapt senses gently humming.
Despite our temperate flowers and leaves That droop under the deluge. Their color seems to strengthen as they grieve, And they cluster, seeking refuge, Yet from our New England loggia, A stream turns them darker, a humid green.
And in the slowly deepening dusk, The trees’ heads toss, agitated, Like elegant women whose gowns have cost A tidy sum and now are saturated. Their full, green plumage lost.
I love the mockingbirds’ changing cries, Announcing from to squeal to carillon. Cardinals’ song change from pleasure to pain Flashing coats of taupe to vermilion. As the evening slowly dies.
It ends and begins with summer, summer, Soundless footsteps in the rain. A prismatic wakening from slumber, A season with no name.