beets, photo by Pamsai‘To a Beet’: A Poem by Kensley Greene The Society May 8, 2024 Beauty, Humor, Poetry 13 Comments . To a Beet I sing the bristled hedgehog grainno horticulture can explain,with six sly seedlings in its brain:__the unborn beet. That hook-and-hollow hydra seed, a spiny knell to nascent weeds;nor leaf nor rootlet can impede__those fuchsia feet. I sing the painted plum-wine sproutsthat spring aloft—as one, no doubt—outrageous rings that blaze about__the clay-specked sand. A troop of chipper, chard-dark throats,they bravely war with wind—and notetheir dogged dances as they float__through breezes; and wag back anew to roundel tight,leaves paddling at the dusty light.Half-dozen sons of even height,__five count their days. I sing the gore-pink joint of stemwhose brothers live not to condemn—the sun is stronger without them!—__They parted ways when silver scissor laid them low; a flash, and in a latticed rowthe shorn stems shrivel stiff and, O!__but one head rears. Now drooping greens spread scarlet ribsto fan its leaflets; broad as bibs,they sway and shade the newborn nibs__that cock their ears in crinkled green, with glossy spike,betwixt the stem-joints; for they liketo sponge the streamlets ’neath the dike__of leather roots. And soon, their shepherd shade outgrown,their narrow pates by zephyrs blown,they crane their backs and carve their own__new fuchsia flutes. I sing the stenciled seal-gray toethat swells its slaty heart below,supporting stems it scarcely knows__for slumber sound in soft manure, bramble-black, no eyes to guard its bristling back.Too fat a globe it grows—alack!—__and leaves the ground with ruthless tear, from throat to tail—into the sun the anchor sails,and breaded soil, like crumbs of shale,__clots still the root. I sing the glistering blade that chops—peel, tail, and stem for swinish slop, and slats of root to cast atop__the silver chute where cream and beef, in slices flat,their broiling bed adrift in fat,snap and spit with every pat__of beet that boils. I sing the sowing then, instead,of tiny slice of scarlet head,packed deep within the belly’s bed __—soft lard its soil. The fallen sons of hydra birthwho skyward slant in mauve-stemmed mirth,drive wind or rain, who ring the earth__with ruddy wreath: I sing their tub’rous sacrificewho gave their blood to eat with rice(That one sly seedling might suffice__to stain our teeth!) . . Kensley Greene is a student at the University of Florida. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. 13 Responses Roy Eugene Peterson May 8, 2024 Wow! That is an amazing poem about beets with such creative details about their growth and edibility. You have a fantastic command of the English language and employ it admirably. My mother used to pickle beets and I loved them. Reply Paul A. Freeman May 8, 2024 A lot to like about this poem, like my fave line, ‘The fallen sons of hydra birth / who skyward slant in mauve-stemmed mirth’ and that superb final stanza. I never ate beetroot as a child because of that staining effect. Where I teach now, beetroot is one of the staple veggies, and I’ve got to like (not love!) it. Thanks for the read, Kensley. Reply Phil L. Flott May 8, 2024 The beets are such a fabulous rhythm. Reply Joseph S. Salemi May 8, 2024 When I read the title of this poem, my first reaction was “Oh, no… another nature-loving absurdity.” But reading the entire piece was not just delightful — it blew my mind! The absolute command of language and rhetorical skill in someone who is a young student was totally unexpected, and very gratifying. The poem is long, but not one of the interlinked quatrains disappoints. It shows that any subject at all, even the most mundane, can be treated with fictive mimesis. And thank God, there is not one of the three miseries (meaning, message, and moral) in it. Reply Norma Pain May 8, 2024 I loved this clever poem and I love beets. Just planted some in the garden. Thank you Kensley. Reply C,B. Anderson May 8, 2024 To me, this sounds like a poem by someone who has never actually tried to grow beets. The purple stain is true to life, but the rest of it is uninformed whimsy. And there was no mention of the nitric oxide production that might be the most important benefit of eating beet root. Oh well …. Reply Joseph S. Salemi May 8, 2024 C’mon, Kip — look at it as a poem, not a botanical report. Reply C.B. Anderson May 9, 2024 OK, Joseph. I think this poem is a middling example of the willful abandonment of verisimilitude. Nature has no need to imitate Art, but Art needs to know where it comes from. Reply jd May 8, 2024 Though I can’t eat beets I found the poem delightful and imaginative. I love the energetic flow and color of its words. Thank you, Kelsey, I see a bright future for you as a wordsmith. Reply Julian D. Woodruff May 9, 2024 Thanks for this distinctive poem. It shows an impressive knowledge of the poet’s toolbox. Reply Susan Jarvis Bryant May 10, 2024 Beet poetry! Now there’s a novel thought. I love every juicy, joyous line of it. Thank you, Kensley! Reply Margaret Coats May 11, 2024 Kelsey, you don’t call this “Ode to a Beet,” but you could have, because it is a marvelous and skillful burlesque ode. There are many features of the grandest of lyric forms: the high tone, the expansive diction, the classical allusions of “zephyr” and “hydra,” the elaborate form of paired stanzas with lines of different length rhymed aaab cccb, and the very length of the poem itself. Odes may seem easy to burlesque by choosing a humble subject and making grandiose fun of it, but you have to know what you’re doing, as you prove you do. Even the apparent carelessness about botanical accuracy fits the genre. Admirable produce from the poet’s kitchen garden! Reply Adam Sedia May 17, 2024 I echo Margaret’s thoughts. This is a well-done burlesque ode, and you demonstrate a marvelous aptitude with your use of language, glorifying your humble subject with evocative description, allusion, and complex grammatical construction. Great choice of subject, too. Root vegetables are the “humblest” of them all, buried in the dirt. But they are some of the tastiest, and in pre-industrial times were vital, as they sustained most families through winter. Excellent work. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Roy Eugene Peterson May 8, 2024 Wow! That is an amazing poem about beets with such creative details about their growth and edibility. You have a fantastic command of the English language and employ it admirably. My mother used to pickle beets and I loved them. Reply
Paul A. Freeman May 8, 2024 A lot to like about this poem, like my fave line, ‘The fallen sons of hydra birth / who skyward slant in mauve-stemmed mirth’ and that superb final stanza. I never ate beetroot as a child because of that staining effect. Where I teach now, beetroot is one of the staple veggies, and I’ve got to like (not love!) it. Thanks for the read, Kensley. Reply
Joseph S. Salemi May 8, 2024 When I read the title of this poem, my first reaction was “Oh, no… another nature-loving absurdity.” But reading the entire piece was not just delightful — it blew my mind! The absolute command of language and rhetorical skill in someone who is a young student was totally unexpected, and very gratifying. The poem is long, but not one of the interlinked quatrains disappoints. It shows that any subject at all, even the most mundane, can be treated with fictive mimesis. And thank God, there is not one of the three miseries (meaning, message, and moral) in it. Reply
Norma Pain May 8, 2024 I loved this clever poem and I love beets. Just planted some in the garden. Thank you Kensley. Reply
C,B. Anderson May 8, 2024 To me, this sounds like a poem by someone who has never actually tried to grow beets. The purple stain is true to life, but the rest of it is uninformed whimsy. And there was no mention of the nitric oxide production that might be the most important benefit of eating beet root. Oh well …. Reply
C.B. Anderson May 9, 2024 OK, Joseph. I think this poem is a middling example of the willful abandonment of verisimilitude. Nature has no need to imitate Art, but Art needs to know where it comes from. Reply
jd May 8, 2024 Though I can’t eat beets I found the poem delightful and imaginative. I love the energetic flow and color of its words. Thank you, Kelsey, I see a bright future for you as a wordsmith. Reply
Julian D. Woodruff May 9, 2024 Thanks for this distinctive poem. It shows an impressive knowledge of the poet’s toolbox. Reply
Susan Jarvis Bryant May 10, 2024 Beet poetry! Now there’s a novel thought. I love every juicy, joyous line of it. Thank you, Kensley! Reply
Margaret Coats May 11, 2024 Kelsey, you don’t call this “Ode to a Beet,” but you could have, because it is a marvelous and skillful burlesque ode. There are many features of the grandest of lyric forms: the high tone, the expansive diction, the classical allusions of “zephyr” and “hydra,” the elaborate form of paired stanzas with lines of different length rhymed aaab cccb, and the very length of the poem itself. Odes may seem easy to burlesque by choosing a humble subject and making grandiose fun of it, but you have to know what you’re doing, as you prove you do. Even the apparent carelessness about botanical accuracy fits the genre. Admirable produce from the poet’s kitchen garden! Reply
Adam Sedia May 17, 2024 I echo Margaret’s thoughts. This is a well-done burlesque ode, and you demonstrate a marvelous aptitude with your use of language, glorifying your humble subject with evocative description, allusion, and complex grammatical construction. Great choice of subject, too. Root vegetables are the “humblest” of them all, buried in the dirt. But they are some of the tastiest, and in pre-industrial times were vital, as they sustained most families through winter. Excellent work. Reply