close
  Butterfly   House 

When I was just a little girl.
I saw a small black creature like a tiny worm,
and saved it from a greedy jay who wanted it for lunch.
I carried it inside, safe on its wide green leaf.
My grandpa said it was a larva and soon would be a butterfly.

We laid the larva carefully on thistle leaves inside an empty jar,
put in a twig for it to climb- then made a lid of soft white paper
all stuck around with glue.
My grandpa knew exactly what to do.
"I raised a butterfly myself," he said, "when I just your age."
How strange to think my grandpa once was young like me.
"We would have been best friends if I'd been there back then,
"I said. My grandpa smiled. "It worked out anyhow.
We're best friends now."

Up in his room
we found a box.
I cut a window in its side,
then covered it with screen.
Soon I could look inside and see my larva
looking back at me.
What would she see?
A human face
so big and scary,
strange and starey?
What would she think?

"I want it pretty till she goes," I said.
And so Grandpa and I drew flowers on colored paper.
Cone flowers, purple-blue, and marigolds, latana
bringht as flame, and thistles, too.
We wedged a garden twig inside the box for her to walk on,
so her wings could dry once she became a butterfly.

My grandpa knows the flowers butterflies like best.
The ones where they can rest and drink the sweet,clear nectar.
We glued the painted flowers inside the box so it was bright with color.
Made a sky above, the lid all blue with small white cotton clouds,
and green with tops of tree that seemed to sway in soundless air.

I made a curve of rainbow
like a hug to keep her safe
whil she was there.
We set the jar inside and closed the painted lid.
Through the screened window
I could see the garden house.
A place of flowers and space
and waiting stillness.
Each day I put out leaves for food
and watched my larva change.

My Grandpa knew when it was time to gently pull away
the paper top she hung from.I taped it to the wall inside her house
and let her be.She would hang free inside the chrysalis
that kept her hidden from the world.

Inside that magic place she grew,
 transformed herself,
came out, drooped, limp and slack,
with crumpled wings.
She was a butterfly,
all spotted, orange ,black, and brown
as if someone had shaken paints
and let the drops fall down.

"Our Painted Lady," Grandpa said. "It's time."
He meant that it was time
for her to leave for her new life.
I swallowed tears.
from the beginning I had known today would come.
Now it was here.
My grandpa took my hand.
"Cry if you like," he said.
"We  understand."

WE carried out the box and raised the lid.
I watched her falter as she felt
the first warm touch of sun, saw trees,
felt breezes brush across her wings.
She rose, then rested on the fig tree branch.
I saw her fly. "Good-bye."

So many years have passed.
I am as old as Grandpa was
that spring when I was young.
I live in the house that once was his.
The garden glows with cone flowers,
purple-blue, and marigolds, latana,
bright as flame. And thistles, too.
Now every spring the Painted Ladies come.
They float and drft like blossoms.
When I walk they flutter by to kiss me
with a painted wing.
Sometimes they cling
as though I am a flower myself.

My neighbors cannot understand.
"Our flowers are the same as yours,"
they say each time they visit me.
"We even plainted thistles
to invite the butterflies,
but they don't come.
They fill your air
like autumn leaves
although it isn't fall.
It's such a mystery ."
I smile.
It's not a mystery at all.

I think my Painted Ladies
talk among themselves
of how their great-great-grandma,
too far back to say,
was saved
from being eaten by a jay.
"This young girl made a house for her,"
they whisper as they fly.
"A painted garden in a box,
so she'd see beauty
as she hung in that half sleep
that we've all known.

"This is the girl,but old now.
We visit her each spring
to give her back
 the love she gave to us
so long ago."
It's not a mystery to me.
I think I know.
  by- Eve  Bunting



arrow
arrow
    全站熱搜

    balletvickie 發表在 痞客邦 留言(8) 人氣()