The Boxwood Hedge
Two hundred years ago
A schooner with a cargo
Of Polish swans
And English boxwood bushes
Was bound for New York Harbor
When it was shipwrecked in a storm
Just off Long Island
Because the cabin-boy
Opened their cages
The forty swans took flight
Into the marshes
The sapling boxwood bushes
Were swept ashore
And up into the beach-grass
On the dunes
Where children found them
Now three heads taller
Than the tallest man
Massive
And rich in shadows
The boxwood bushes
Are growing as a hedge around
A country doctor’s garden
Their little waxen leaves
Are of a green so deep
It’s almost black
And when the sun is on them
They haunt the doctor’s house
With a dim double perfume
Like that of fresh-ground coffee
And the musk
Of a wild mushroom.
_______________________________________________
A Seaside Autumn
Children are back on the playground
At Our Lady of Ostrabrama
Filling the air with a babble
Like that of a hundred birds
Asters and goldenrod appear
All over town
Wherever earth is idle
No on gets off the morning train
Arriving from the city
Keepers of little shops prepare
To move to Florida
And there are storms of music in the sky
As the wild geese fly over
Out in the swamp the maples blaze
With a seraphic fire
While huge and grey as elephants
The older maples of the street
Secretly leaf by leaf
Change their green crowns to gold
And let them fall
Down at the shore
Beaches are empty, summer crowds have gone
The azure glittering of the sea
Is there alone.
—Anne Porter