The poem winning the 2nd place of Nature 2020-2021

Dear Friends,


Literature and nature bring us together. A few years ago, Darwin studied gravitropism, i.e., a growth response, of plants, to gravity. He removed surgically the caps of roots and then verified how they would grow. To his surprise the roots started to grow without the influence of gravity. This is to stress that nature contains mysteries and influences our imagination… Poetry seams to follow the same principals. This is the case of the poem that won the 2nd place. Congratulations to Jill Hall.


 


“A Quarantine Visitor” by Jill G. Hall (USA)


 


In the quiet summer sun


on my San Diego patio


a plump lizard basks.


“Hello,” I whisper. Her


smile sly, eyes button-beads,


skin resembling grandma’s purse.


 


Prolific in our childhood garden


my brother Sandy saved them


in shoeboxes, fed them flies.


Sometimes he’d pick one up,


snigger as its tail fell off, 


wiggled about. He’d chase


me with the terrible    


Tyrannosaurus Rexes


in his outstretched hands.


Terrified I’d cry, run away


until the day I grit my teeth,


stood my ground, patted its


crusty head. After that


he stopped pestering me.


At least not with reptiles.


He often kissed them until


one bit him on the lower lip


and like mom would say he


screamed bloody murder.


I think he still has a scar.


I feared those dears had


become extinct long ago.


It’s interesting what a coronavirus


can do to shift the balance back.


 


Enjoy.

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