|  | Ruellia Noctiflora     A colored man come running at me out of the woods
 one Sunday morning about twenty years past.
 The Junior Choir was going to be singing
 at Primitive Baptist over in Notasulga,
 and we were meeting early, to practice.
 I remember wishing I was barefoot
 in the heavy, cool-looking dew.
 And suddenly this tall, rawbone wild man
 come puffing out of the woods, shouting
 Come see! Come see!
 Seemed like my mary-janes just stuck
 to the gravel. Girl, my heart
 like to abandon ship!
 
 Then I saw by the long tin cylinder
 slung over his shoulder on a leather strap,
 and his hoboish tweed jacket
 and the flower in his lapel
 that it was the Professor.
 He said, gesturing,
 his tan eyes a blazing,
 that last night,
 walking in the full moon light,
 he'd stumbled on
 a very rare specimen:
 Ruellia Noctiflora,
 the Night-blooming Wild Petunia.
 Said he suddenly sensed a fragrance
 and a small white glistening.
 It was clearly a petunia:
 The yellow future beckoned
 from the lip of each tubular flower,
 a blaring star of frilly, tongue-like petals.
 He'd never seen this species before.
 As he tried to place it,
 its flowers gaped wider,
 catching the moonlight.
 suffusing the night with its scent.
 All night he watched it
 promise silent ecstasy to moths.
 
 If we hurried, I could see it
 before it closed to contemplate
 becoming seed.
 Hand in hand, we entered
 the light-spattered morning-dark woods.
 Where he pointed was only a white flower
 until I saw him seeing it.
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