We think they go well together—the translucent
vanilla orchid, the slipper orchid, the ginger
fragrances of the fiddle leaf, the swollen,
juice-filled buds of magnolia grandiflora,
Turkish tulip, Susa crocus, and the siamang
gibbons who pound and scream, quarreling
and sweating, stinking inside their tight
cages where we have put them in the garden
under the iron oak trees.

They shake the bars, their snouts
dripping, piles of fecal matter covered
with green flies in the corners of their cages
How they reek, puffing their red throat sacs
to holler and hoot in chorus at dawn and dusk.
The petals of the fringed iris and the tea-scented
China rose certainly shimmer then with that roar,
and even pollen spores and feeding butterflies
are shaken loose by the fetid blast.

But it all makes a nice contrast, we think.
So we let the ranging wisteria venture over
the east brick wall without pruning, the grape
hyacinths spill supremely beyond the borders
of the walk. The spirea and trumpet vines
billow up through summer at will
like surf in a storm.