The Lupine is considered an invasive flower that doesn’t belong to Finnish nature. In this mini-series of poems, I use the lupine as a lens to think about immigration, migration and invasion.
Wind:
Every autumn I beg you to take me to the place I am told is my home
But you are not strong enough to blow me past the vast ocean
You have sent me here again, to Vaasa
Helsinki and Savo
On roadsides and bus stands
I have drawn a map in my dreams
I have drifted there
Like a slow-moving raft dancing on deep blue waves
I have retraced my grandparents’ steps
To a place I am told I should belong
Why do you always bring me back here?
Hummingbird:
Every spring I open my petals
And let you sip my nectar
You draw my sweetness with a needle
Your kisses bruise but I need you
You know not how to give
But you sure can take
You flap your wings until they hum
You turn your head upside down
You speak in color
Your feathers, metallic in the sun
You do not sing,
You dance, for you.
Perennial:
Dear Lupine,
No perennial born of the soil dies
You have survived the coldest of frosts
Gorgeously,
Proudly,
You shoot off the ground when it thaws
Unafraid to start over
Dear Lupine,
Look at you stand in the meadow
Your white, purple, pink floating on green,
You have beautiful colors,
But your true beauty lies in your resilience
You bloom where you are planted
And spread your energy far and wide