The Hostas Are Out

Hydrangeas are thriving, drunk drivers are driving,
    the creeks barely flow and are fetid
where dragonflies dart and, for the most part,
    things are well—though where are we headed?

The world is chock-full of the goat and the bull,
    the catalpa, the hawk and the cloud,
the mountain, the sea, the giraffe and the flea
    and the music of Earth—light or loud.

In a chapel, a choir rejoices with fire
    while a beat throbs and blares from a Chevy
that rivals their hymn with its own brand of vim
    and the world teems with light things and heavy. 

The cheeks of our towers go red as the hours
   retreat, all the trees silhouetted
which, trembling in rows, are as crowded with crows
   as those movies and dreams we have dreaded.

The boulevards bustle like leaves, which rustle
    in linden and pied sycamore,
while explosives go boom and the world has no room
    left for jaguar, red wolf or macaw.

The robins are trilling while girls, though unwilling,
    not even pubescent, are wedded.
Yes, the hostas are out, the bees are about
    and various men are beheaded.