
Candytuft against a picket fence.
I planted it there,
a sprig of a thing, fifty cents of a chance
that April would return
and the sun would warm the fence
you painted in August’s heat.
Like white coins, these flowers
where I walk through the gate, alone,
my ears tuned to the words
of one more Holocaust novel,
all despair thrown up against what
spring would want me to forget.
What I had forgotten was spring itself,
some faith that it would return
after you had gone.
I looked for you in the odd places —
the tool shed behind muddy rakes,
a corner of the shed where I stored seeds.
Loss is like that, fooling recollection —
where you last set a spade
before turning to another task,
or the combination to a lock
you thought you knew by heart.
It had always opened the door.
Now this two o’clock sun
on an April day calls out
White on white –
the candytuft,
the whitewashed fence.
I close winter’s gate behind me.
I love your poem but that is not Woodruff in the photo!
LikeLike
You’re kidding. It is what we call Woodruff. What do you call it?
LikeLike