The Sex Life
of Flowers
That Bloom
After Dark
Mine is a hybrid theory.
It fuses the pulse
of the human heart
with the rhythm of nature
and the universe.
My hypothesis is simple:
Every dream
is a flower
that blooms
at night while
the gardener
sleeps.
The dreamer
hovers like a bee
over the flower bed,
his being freed
from physical constraint,
only to find that
in the wee hours
the flowers find
the darkness arousing.
Between bee and being
a speechless intercourse
as unique and expressive
as a sign language
becomes palpable.
Is it any wonder
that after midnight
every garden
turns into a veritable
den of iniquity.
Take the tulips
offering up their roofied goblets
to be syphoned like honey
from unfamiliar lips.
Or the daffodil’s baring
their privates
utterly promiscuous.
Or the hibiscus growing
so horny it’s ridiculous.
The lavender, positively libidinous.
It’s a botany for the hot to trot!
In a bed of roses,
breathing in their scent alone
is considered getting to second base.
For every piston and stamen,
bosomy blossoms entice us
like B movie starlets
in a 60’s Hammer Horror film.
After midnight this very path
is an unseemly flirtation walk.
One need only close one’s eyes
to see their true colors.
Not only have they
designs on each other,
they have them on us.
Their sole rule of thumb:
every night a de-flowering.
You can feel them
flirting even now
can’t you?
Using their wiles
in the darkness
beneath your lids.
Flowers and dreamers
drowning in the dark
together
in dire need of
nothing less than
artificial insemination;
an exchange of pollen
via the stamen
to the carpel,
until a delicate
fertilization
occurs
before wilting, spent,
entwined stems
collapsing side by side
to form
a vulva-shaped
mandorla.
Dreams
make us all
female,
receptive,
so that we live
half our lives
in a state
of abject
fecundity.
Realizing this,
I ask you:
What better vehicle
than the irrational
when the literal
threatens to
reason us all away?
This is the testament
of the flowers:
Nature as the supreme harlot,
with beauty her snare.
At night,
our psyches
push through
dirt to make
their messages known.
Through
the coitus
between
darkness and light,
fear and desire
escape their
thin skinned
terrariums
only to buzz
about
in search
of sacred
pollen
like
church busybodies
syphoning
gossip about
the local gardener’s
love life.
Their hearsay
knows no
shame
nor are we
disbelieving,
as our minds
know only
how to
bloom, being
less adept
at other
courtships.
That said, the flowers
are emphatic,
fanning out
from their centers,
peacock-like colors
of purple, taupe, and jade
flanked by
the curdling cries
of flora
in heat.
And you thought you knew flora.
Yah, Flora and her hanging gardens.
Twice nightly.
Such dreams
arrive un-beckoned;
a reckoning
from the
other side,
sprouting
mandala-like
patterns,
both holy
and wholly
on their
terms,
bearing the gift
of nocturnal release;
the very mud
their roots
are mired in,
a compress
for drawing
out toxins.
This garden is
a bacchanalia;
a peep show
under every petal.
Creation itself enacting
one glorious sexual act
after another.
A sacred stems-a-kimbo.
Despite
our sleep
we remain
subject to beauty,
in order
to meet
divinities
face to face
within the
sheltered
perimeter of this
very Eden’s
undeniable eroticism.
Like the flowers,
dreams want nothing more
than to pluck us
from ourselves
and offer us up
in a gesture of love
for the nearest Beloved.
Though inside
the dream
we are all
our own
light source.
Night is still
a soil
and
God
the gardener
of her carnal
Queendom.
Now you see.
Sleep is Elysian.
Who, then among us
can say
which humus
is more real?
The one we
grow out of
by day,
or the one
that decomposes
by night,
floating our
fears,
hopes,
desires,
lusts,
and
loves
upward
like a lotus
rising
from the mud.