—For Susan Duhan Felix
By the Arches Cluster, the most
crowded place in the Milky Way,
jam-packed with stars, 25,000
light-years from Earth in Sagittarius
By Earth, whirling through space,
the only planet known to have
free oxygen, liquid water, whales,
wallabies and redwood forests
By a single redwood tree, 350
feet tall and ten feet in diameter,
standing above the Pacific
since Herod was exiled to Gaul
By a single redwood needle, flat,
with two silvery bands on its
underside and inner machinery
endlessly churning out ATP
By a molecule of ATP, which
carries energy in all the cells
of people and trees, a currency
required for love and breathing
By two children, a boy and a girl,
playing under the tree, who spot
a speckled woodpecker with a red
patch on its head, tapping the bark,
igniting a blaze of amazement
—For Herb
Today, anything goes:
the bay takes a bow when I clap
and birds whistle Bach.
Beads of light roller-skate
above chimneys and roofs.
The air, alive
with pollen grains looking for mates,
insects that glitter like kings,
and germs that bounce
with every breath we take,
moves incessantly
like the tangle of kelp in its water bed
at the end of the pier. The bay
leaps and curls at our feet.
My heart beats faster.
We are seventy percent water:
our proteins, lipids, nucleic acids
and carbohydrates are packaged
in cells of many shapes—
trees, goblets, boxes, ribbons, bells—
surrounded by liquid.
Let's surge and break in ripples!—
in this atmosphere, pulsing with light,
where atoms spin in pairs like tiny lovers
and random paths collide.
“I Am Amazed” First published in Psychological Perspectives (C. G. Jung Institute of Los Angeles).
“Poem to Give a Lover” First published in Berkeley Poets Cooperative.