There’s a garden among the stars
where flowers are gates to other
worlds.
Try the pink rosebud that opens
shyly.
plunge through its smooth and
fragrant folds
into the Victorian garden where tea
is laid
and sweet girls play and show a
blushing priest
a bunnyhole that leads to
Wonderland
and a ginger cat issues opaque
directions.
Take the dare of the “Drink Me”
bottle
and you’ll become inconceivably
small
even faster than Alice, so fast you
won’t see
a grass blade rear into a royal
palm
and ants turn into six-legged
horses.
You’ll grow, by diminishing, into a
world
vaster than the one you knew
before,
you’ll swim among stars no
telescope has seen,
you’ll find light-ships among the
galaxies,
immensity held in the iota of a
speck
that eludes the electron microscope
but not the home-drawn voyager.
This poem is in the collection Here Everything Is Dreaming: Poems and Stories by Robert Moss. Published by Exclesior Editions, State University of New York Press.
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