to find near the end of your days
an archaeology
of gardens
we can
enjoy together
we can
enjoy
seeds, patterns, flowering,
history
a stone
wall uncovered, discovered
traces a
maze
the journeys
of strangers
the shape of
old beds
tree roots
twisting under
I offered in
these last decades
books of
flowers
books of women gardeners,
Vita and Enid,
and I treasure
yours
walk up to
the front door
through its
ageing shrubs
gardens are
dreams for me
musings of
possibility
growth, seasons,
beauty, dirty hands
and knees
examining the
aphid and bee
at my child
height in memory
pulling
weeds shaking soil from their roots
happy at
the wriggle flip of the worm
my spade
missed
the scent
of humus, digging beneath, cutting back
looking under,
watching
and you watched
from the high window
as I
watered our garden in summer
you let me
be lost in my dreams, this better place
the best
place I could be, and I think you knew
as you left me
there alone
bare foot on
the front lawn
with the rainbow
spray
veins on a
leaf, the whorl of a snail drooping heavy on a leaf,
with all the plants sprung from cuttings
collected over years from friends
(you could
name them all and remember
point out
as you walked past
cuttings from
relatives passed away)
I remember
your open secateurs
the jars at
the kitchen window
you taught
me the shape of leaves and petals
taxonomies,
botanical and common names
an order
that made some sense in everything else
but I never
managed it
the tasks
of my dreams were too great
now
I have two
apple trees entwined
in a
courtyard, and I can relate that we had one true harvest
(plenty of
woolly aphid lacing through spring since, my dear).
I dream of
orchards and making jam.
we share
our apples with the wasps and a possum.
I have
cacti (they flower every year, pastel and rare)
scorched on
our scouring balcony.
I have
herbs (we cut for dinner)
oregano,
marjoram, rosemary, basil, sage
small achievements
to tend
am grateful
for
what survives drought and frost
and now, I
feel, the leaf edge of white camellias
dark and
waxy, catch against skin
wonder at
the imperfections of bruises
on white
petals, about decay
how the
petals fell as I touched them to my face
in your
garden
so beautiful, and deeply moving, Sarah.
ReplyDeleteThanks Efi. I wept as I wrote. X
ReplyDeleteOh Sarah. Weeping for a life. Stunning.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful - thank you
ReplyDeleteI can almost smell the garden.
ReplyDeleteWhat a special poem. Very touching...and the other senses on overload. The Other is so present in it.
ReplyDeletea rebirth in a garden; haunting eulogy Sarah, beautifully crafted
ReplyDeleteThat's lovely, resonates for me especially.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Rosemary for remembrance?
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Rosemary for remembrance?
ReplyDeleteYes, for remembrance but the rosemary, basil and marjoram (French version) are also names of family members, so another personal layer of meaning for me, and all in my garden plus oregano which I think is my favourite herb and I used to send my small son out to pick it to cook. Thank for your responses all.
ReplyDelete