Pressed in the soil’s black web, nursed by the rough

offhand embrace of frost, the hyacinths

turn in their sleep. Such blunt stabbings

against the paperiness of ancient skin,

such cell-memory, igniting

a slow fuse laid in the ground.

Pressed in the soil’s black web, rocked back to sleep

by the storm that tugs at the holly tree’s roots

the hyacinths know they are listening

to the west wind that kills them,

but they are safe, having given themselves to darkness.

All they desire is not to flower.

Hyacinths, when I see you forced from the soil

glossy and over-talkative

with your loud scent and demand for attention

I will put you back to sleep, forking

the long-fibred darkness over you.