“Weed in a French Garden,” by Madison Mainwaring (Poetry ’19)
Madison Mainwaring, a 2019 poetry alum, was recently featured in Bracken. Read an excerpt of Mainwaring’s poem “Weed in a French Garden” below:
Weed in a French Garden
The horticulturalists, astronauts
with clippers, shape the hedges
in straight lines, their hands firm
with a blade. In this stilled pool
of beauty, there’s no “outside,”
no nature at all, really.
Even the sun here
is in fact not the sun,
harnessed like a cheetah in a cage
as elaborate metaphor
for the absolute power of the king.
Don’t be tricked by the lack of a fence,
the eighteen signs saying bienvenu.
You are not meant to be
in this world. The light is deigned.
Read the rest of this poem here: https://www.brackenmagazine.com/issue-viii/weed-in-a-french-garden-by-madison-mainwaring