Blueberry Preserves

 

Blueberry Preserves

 

Mountain in late summer:

we pick blueberries together,

the ones just ripe,

with glaucous bloom

and wet with dew,

savor sweetness, laughing,

“Taste this,” you say,

and my hand touches yours

as I reach for the fruit,

then we pause —

a thrush,

leaving soon,

flutes

from the woods,

the light has changed,

and now there’s wind:

it’s time,

so we head back down,

our pails full.

 

That night

I stay awake

and put up these preserves

for later on.

Kirk Follo lives in Lexington, Virginia. He is retired from Washington and Lee University, where he taught German for many years.

Our project takes the words spoken by Jesus to Mary Magdalene in the garden after she discovers his empty tomb — noli me tangere (“touch me not”) — as a provocation for reflection on the COVID-19 pandemic, and on other pandemics, viral and social, that engulf us.