A spectacular butterfly splendid in its monochrome, leopard-print reflecting armour flies unto the lavender branches recently budded in my garden Fancying myself a faithful reader of Nabokov and drawn to anecdotes of self-glorification I thought I should become a Lepidopterist and catalogue its striking corpse beginning what could become a masterful collection Me, the quarter-tanned Irish bopping all in tennis whites with mock-radioactive web of butterfly doom among the wooden yard dividers
But where should I keep it? this hype-building collection of one amongst my dust-collecting books my backdated journals and flaccid-worn glossy magazines my "value-appreciating" vinyl records the more prettily curated and precision-hung images that curate my partner's collections?
No, it is not for me to stop it succumbing to dust, to allow it turn into something beautiful again if a tragic kind of beauty amongst the dirt, for something becomes more wonderful when it's beauty is not forced on show but produces itself through more layered, yet uncomplicated means returned back out of the dust, without any of our artificial light recording again it's eventual demise