I’m dreaming of the dahlias up there on the radiator
starting to grow leaves
and the jade plant getting a little fatter
and a little thicker every day.
I am the man with the rake, bent over with
emotional neck pains, standing in my yard getting
ready to be a garden advisor and a river prophet.

It’s freezing—which is what peas like—and every
bird within half a mile is grating its beak
and foolishly chirping and coughing and whistling, half
         off-key.
I have to make up my mind whether to look
back upstairs at the jade plant and the thick
white rag pulling it back in place or at the
sparkling river carrying everything—good and bad—
with it downhill to Trenton and Philadelphia,
fifty miles beyond my graveyard and my roaring spillway.

This spring song is for the drunks in New York;
and the Chinese witch hazel;