Sunday, July 19, 2009

the lepidopterist at rest

this post is alternately titled, "where can i get me some hyacinth shoes?"

presumably, butterflies don't read. and it follows that most don't blog, so. if you know any, please tell them that this summer, it would be wise to stay light of wing, so to speak. sleep with one eye open. lock your cocoon. flit, don't sit.

in other words, float away, you wee fairies! she wakes at dawn:

this one, on the other hand, poses less of a threat:
although, let's give her some props. she can totally sit up unassisted until she falls over. which is really hard to do when your entire body is made of cheeks: elbow cheeks, foot cheeks, neck cheeks, belly cheeks, very cheeky thighs and, of course, biscuit and face cheeks.

before you feel too sorry for the butterflies, you should know that Little was duly humbled at the arboretum on saturday when she was nearly eaten by this "peacot."

or so she thought. what really happened was that it lulled us into passivity by patiently sitting for photographs, then opened its pin-cushion head wide enough to swallow my baby and screamed for the suffering of motherless children, terror on the high seas, and man's inhumanity to man. it was more than startling: we all died a little inside. then we speed-walked to the mall for an orange julius.*
and now, [part of] a poem. about peacocks, because i feel like it.

from Fantasy
by Gwendolyn Bennett


I sailed in my dreams to the Land of Night
Where you were the dusk-eyed queen,
and there in the pallor of moon-veiled light
The loveliest things were seen ...

A slim-necked peacock sauntered there
In a garden of lavender hues,
And you were strange with your purple hair
As you sat in your amethyst chair
With your feet in your hyacinth shoes ...

*but really we drove. pretty fast.

8 comments:

Lola said...

oh my gosh. i'm laughing out loud and i think i'm crying.
you are a funny grill and while i awoke suuuuper early this morning in hopes of catching an early train to come and SEE you, i am still blog hopping and facebooking waiting for the boy to wake up. ok, i'm over it, i'm going to wake him up, see you soon.
i hope you're still funny when i get there.

annie said...

i no longer need to do my ab workout. thanks, sherry :)

annie said...

i just read it again. still laughing.

jaymie said...

:)

you look like a mother goddess in that picture with liv and the peacock.

2x2momma said...

That is too funny about your encounter with the peacot. I remember getting completely terrorized by an aggressive squirrel at Washington Square park, it happened like 10 years ago but to this day I'm still freaked out by it!!

coysue said...

Cheeks and curls what more does one (or 2 in this case) need ;-)

Michele said...

What a scrumptiously purple poem. We have a peacock that lives in our neighborhood and we will see him sauntering casually up and down the lawns in the neighborhood. And when he roosts at night, the screaming begins. From a half a block away it is disconcerting - I can't imagine being a half a yard! I would have high-tailed it out of there too.

word verification: parit "That ain't no parit screaming at me."

annie said...

still lauging...