‘Fury’ by Deidra Greenleaf Allan

Rocky Mountain Parnassian and Digger Wasp
by Gerald Friedman

Fury

Late August and the yellow jackets 
     are fighting each other and the butterflies 
to get at the figs whose sweet seedy pulp 
     oozes from burst sacs and spills
onto branches   A pair of wasps locked 
     abdomen to abdomen wrestles 
on the ground    legs grappling
     stingers pulsing   Others aim at my head
to keep me from the sugary storehouse 

Their time here must be coming to a close
     a premonition built into their brains 
that makes them aggressive and feverish 
     Unlike you who stood so peacefully 
at the pasture gate   content despite 
     your body’s betrayal and own approaching sunset 
to watch the Angus gather like a second shadow 
     beneath the field’s solitary sycamore

What must it be like to watch the horizon 
     light up in orange and gold    to smell 
the first smoky wisps of fall and taste the last 
     intense juices of summer knowing 
what it foretells—that soon you will be husk   shell     
     blown away in October’s breezes

You went so gently   like a soft exhalation 
     My departure will be more like the wasp’s
stealing all the sweetness I can for myself
     and ending in a frenzy of stinging


Deidra Greenleaf Allan has been published in American Poetry Review, Poetry Miscellany, Puerto del Sol, West Branch, and Quartet Journal, among other print and online journals. In 2001 she was selected as Montgomery County (PA) Poet Laureate by Robert Hass. She has received a Leeway Emerging Artist Award and was a finalist for a Pew Fellowship in poetry. One of her poems was selected in 2012 by Musehouse as its Poem of Hope poster.


Gerald Friedman grew up in the suburbs of Cleveland, Ohio, and now teaches physics and math in northern New Mexico. He has published poetry in various journals, and photography in the Santa Fe Literary Review as well as Feral. You can see more of his work at https://jerryfriedman.wixsite.com/my-site-2