Online journal capturing the moment and the memory of moments. A meadow meditation. |
Rzóska's dance: we few in number multiply, feverish to seize our time, our numbered hours, only our youth will somehow survive this drought, await: for vernal rains, for their own short time. ¡Mira! The frog eyes the monsters quiets her voice sits still while one lifts a raw red pepper held in one hand chomps with big white teeth. The frog prepares her escape; gets ready, set— ¡Mira! Aquà está la ranita. and the monsters peer through the empty space. Ah— ya saltó. Pues— And the frog eyes the monsters, sits still as a stone, while the monsters wait. © KÃ¥re Enga 2010-10-11 [167.223] I have a neighbor named Mira (¡mira! means look! in English); she was eating a raw pepper like an apple. I thought of the plastic mini-frogs I found abandoned the other day. I'm thinking of refining this ditty, making a copy, pinning it up with a frog by her door. A limnology text. Taking notes on words and concepts. For instance Rzóska did a study (1961) on temporary pools in Sudan (an astatic environment) that led to a race against time. And O'Brian and Vinyard (1978) show how in the presence of a predator Daphnia carinata can morph into a crested form. Ah... the stuff of technical jargon that remains to be explored/explained by poetry. It was cold! Only 31º at 10 am. We have definitely entered autumn. Last year a record 8º froze everything. This year the perennials are hardening off or going into slumber. 61,073 |