[It’s quiet at the moment. If you think it’s the calm before the storm of the 4th of July’s patriotic chaos, you’re wrong. It’s the calm after the visual explosion of this year’s peonies. Here’s a look at this year’s orgiastic extravaganza. All photos by Silverbelle Sandy (except as noted). SB SM]


Peonies
Grandma called them pineys, and I didn’t know why.
They smelled so good, the full lush petals
crowded thick, the whole flower heavy on its stem,
the leaves dark and rich and green as shade in Chatauqua Woods
where each spring I hunted for violets. What could there be
to pine for on this earth? Now I think maybe it was Missouri
she missed, and maybe that was what somebody she knew
called peonies there, before she traveled to Ohio,
a sixteen-year-old bride whose children came on as fast
as field crops and housework. Her flowers saved her,
the way they came up year after year and with only a bit of care
lived tender and pretty, each kind surprising,
keeping its own sweet secret: lily-of-the-valley, iris,
the feathery-leaved cosmos, lilacs in their white and purple curls,
flamboyant sweet peas and zinnias, the bright four o’clocks
and delphinium, blue as her eyes, and the soft peony flowers
edged deep pink. In her next life I want my grandmother
to walk slowly through the gardens in England and Kyoto.
I want to be there when she recognizes the flowers
and smiles, when she kneels and takes the pineys in her hands.














The Roar of Peonies
The din is deafening.

It brings you to your knees
surrounded by the lushness,
the roar of peonies.

The colorful explosion
the elegance of ease
the crowning spring excitement,
the roar of peonies.

The starting gun of summer,
a gentle kiss of breeze,
It comes when spirit calls it,
the roar of peonies

An ant’s determination,
the backdrop frame of trees
Ephermera plethora
… a gin & tonic, please.
— Silverback SM
