The Meaning of Life, in 20 Stanzas
To admire the simple
lines and serene elegance – in a word, the beauty –
of this unassuming,
little, purple plum
to analyze it into
its smallest constituents, its bound quanta of energy,
of organic
molecule, atom, electron, proton, quark, meson, gluon, Higg’s boson,
string
to mark its modest
place in the multifactorial hologram of spacetime
between the
quantum vacuum and the arguably infinite multiverse
to notice how it
is shaped
a little like a
heart,
a little like a
scrotum
before it
wrinkles
to pop up from a
blossom
on a black, slim bough
and hang there,
thoughtless,
under the sun and
the bees,
until an
overworked field hand
plucks it down
and puts it into his basket
before sending it
off to market
to sit bored on a
produce shelf at Whole Foods,
spritzed every
few minutes by a mist to keep it
Looking Fresh,
for weeks at the
height of summer,
its price going
down half a dollar a pound
each week,
until a
price-conscious shopper
snaps it up, in a
ridiculous little bag,
from the
throw-away bin,
for a truly
insulting $.19 a pound
to decay with
slow dignity in a fruit bowl,
where it was
forgotten when the family
left for vacation
to set it on a
table
and paint it
in the 10,000,000
ways,
from Shubun to Chardin
to Picasso to Damien Hirst
to stick it on
the nose of a clown
followed by an
amorous butterfly
trailed by a
delirious frog
and eyed by a
suspicious acrobat
left behind by a bankrupt
traveling circus
to exchange it for
credit in the commodities market
against a future
shipment of papayas,
kumquats,
huckleberries and passion fruit
to combine it in a
clever scientist’s laboratory
with an orange and
an apricot
and come up with
the ingenious
pluocot
to weigh it in a
grocer’s scale,
take it home at
Christmas
and cook it in a
pudding
and serve it with
brandy
in flames
to dry it until it
becomes a prune
and distribute it
to elderly folk who suffer from irregularity
to wait until the
little plum
is perfectly ripe
(testing it every
day
until it feels soft
and tender)
then,
giving it one
last, admiring glance,
open your mouth
and eat it
then take its pit,
drop it
into a hole
in the garden
and grow it
into a plum tree
where
its delicate, pink flowers,
will always be
the first blossoms in spring
and young girls
and boys in Chinatown
will carry them through
the New Year’s streets
to write a hymn
praising the plum
as it sails
across the heavens,
like a fat,
purple moon,
rising to play
its part
in a feast of the
gods
then disappear,
like a magic act
in a hushed
theater,
the lights
streaking through the darkness
looking for it,
though it is never
to be found
again
visions of Plums
dancing in
children’s dreams
in the night
to
see it with the eye
of
God.