Not just lilacs
are like that;
other purples also
leave us vacant
portals, susceptible
to vagrant spirits.
But take that vase
of lilacs: who goes
near it is erased.
In spite of Proust,
the senses don’t
attach us to a place
or time: we’re used
by sweetness—
taken, defenseless,
invaded by a line
of Saracens,
Picts, Angles,
double rows of
fragrance-loving
ancients—people
matched casually
by nose in an
impersonal and
intermittent immortality
of purple.