Well, I see that Ted has stepped in and given us something, but why not another?
This is from a poet I've just discovered through my host, Alan Williamson. It's from the third collection by Jane Mead, _The Usable Field_ (Alice James Books, 2008). Her other collections are _House of Poured Out Waters_ and _The General Din of the World_, as well as a chapbook, _A Truck Marked Flammable_. She bagged an academic career to manage the family ranch (they grow mainly grapes) in California.
............
THREE CANDLES AND A BOWERBIRD
I do not know why
the three candles must sit
before this oval mirror,
But they must.--
I do not know much
about beauty, though
its consequences
are clearly great--even
to the animals:
to the bowerbird
who steals what is blue,
decorates, paints
his house; to the peacock
who loves the otherwise
useless tail of the peacock--
the tail we love.
The feathers we steal.
Perhaps even to the sunflowers
turning in their Fibonacci
spirals the consequences
are great, or to the mathematical
dunes with ripples
in the equation of all things
windswept. Perhaps
mostly, then, to the wind.
Perhaps mostly to the bowerbird.
I cannot say.
But I light the candles: there is
joy in it. And in the mirror
also, there is joy.