THOUGHTS ON STARING AT PIETER BRUEGHEL’S FALL OF ICARUS

To Brueghel it was spring,

a time when crocus burst through the snow

lambs and calves trot beside proud parents

and farmers plant crops and promises.

It was then that Icarus’s wax wings dissolved

into sticky drops, thick tears slipping first

to signal the rest was soon to follow,

when a young boy crashed into the sea,

that primordial pit that gave breath to life

becoming his silent dark grave for eternity.

Did Icarus know he was going to die?

Did my son know when his plane plummeted?

No plastic wings disintegrated, metal crumpled

and tore up my boy as he smashed into the earth.

It was not spring.

It was fall, with frost and hints of first snows

and it was not time to plant but to harvest

the last dry dregs of remaining corn husks

where the wreckage slammed into that field

lying like a forgotten aluminum suitcase,

contents splayed around for other to take.

But that was no matter, just things

like sunglasses, watch and wax wings.

But then, wings are of no use to the dead.

No, it was not spring

and the sun was not shining.

It was nighttime

and there was no moon.