The frost before the dawn
~autumnal metamorphosis~
Before summer must come autumn,
winter and spring. And so it goes—
through each rolodex rotation
of seasons fluttering brittle-
veined leaf wings through the ages.
Spring’s blooming flush of youth
matures into the heat of a hot tamale
summer, all curves and heels and fire
engine-red lips. Then comes autumn—
and this, Dear Reader, is where
we pause for this poem to incubate.
.
The plump autumnal caterpillar ripe
for metamorphosis munches
their way through a smorgasbord
of cake, pickles, ice cream, sausages,
Swiss cheese, lollipops, watermelon
and more (things a caterpillar oughtn’t
be indulging in, really). No wonder
they get a stomach ache! Immortalised
for wanting too much. Spindly legs
and the curvature of their limber back
bristle with nettles thick and wiry
as an old shoe-shine brush. Run
your fingers over their fuzz and being
the prick they are, they’ll sting you.
They have more grit than you realise.
.
Elms begin shedding their jagged-
tipped leaves like old men losing
their crowning glory, one fading
wisp at a time. They are emasculated
Samson-like in their twilight years.
The air cools and thins as a southerly
breeze swirls umber hunch-backed
leaves in a kaleidoscopic dance
of mid-air chestnut and cinnamon.
.
Firs begin getting frosty-tipped
with icicles, their citrus-scented
needles snap frozen. Children
snug as cocooned bugs in knitted
woollen coats, beanies, and mittens
collect fallen pinecones, rescued
into the warmth of their homes
where some will later be painted
in silver and gold, and placed
on hearths, mantlepieces, and
centrepieces on tables alongside
candles, eucalyptus, nuts, and dried
oranges. Outside, chatter becomes
a visible language of smoke-
signalled mist and breath. And our
caterpillar—remember them?—begins
their painful process of change.
This is no ordinary transformation.
Their metamorphosis by necessity
involves the dissolution of ego and
identity, the loss and renewal of their
very self. Dear Reader, look away now
if you are prone to squeamishness, for
this next part is not for the faint of heart.
.
It takes a certain bravery to reduce
oneself into a gloopy puddle. But
this is precisely what our caterpillar does.
They liquefy themselves into a nutrient
soup of molten enzymes. Muscles, organs,
and tissues deliquesce into cell cluster
blueprints of the butterfly they will become.
Straining inside the straitjacket of a chrysalis,
new limbs develop, bulging against the shell.
If one listened with a stethoscope, one might
hear the scritch and stretch and groan of growth.
It does not come easy. Autumnal change
gives way to the incubation of winter.
Dear Reader, the caterpillar is you.
Change may crucify, but a hot
Nymphalidae summer awaits you.
And so it goes. And so it goes.
About the Creator
Paris Rosemont
Thai Australian poet. Author of poetry collections 'Banana Girl' and 'Barefoot Poetess'.
You may find me at https://www.parisrosemont.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/parisrosemont
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/msparisrose/
Comments (3)
Paris, fabulous take on the challenge; congratulations on your win❣🥰
Wooohooooo congratulations on your win! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊
Amazing read! Congratulations