art by Baslee Troutman |
Before you died,
you planted red tulips in the front yard
You never asked us first if we wanted red tulips
but I didn’t mind because they were beautiful
After you died,
the tulips still bloomed each spring,
pushing up through the snow and hard earth,
rising from the dead
It seemed to me somehow metaphorical
Spiritually significant
Then the rabbits ate the red petals,
leaving only headless stick-like green bodies
and the voles and squirrels ate the wintering bulbs
Now we have no tulips
I’m not sure what the metaphor is supposed to be
but I see you looking down,
shaking your head,
laughing.
9 comments:
hahaha....cool poem...and funny situation...i dunno...maybe it was to give but a glimpse of beauty so you can find it yourself...
I'm not sure what the metaphor is meant to be...
I love that line. It speaks to the way we look for signs, reasons and comfort after a loss, and how there really aren't any. Just the good memories, which is why we miss them.
Not sure what it means too but at least you and he can laugh about it ~ Smiles ~
Just brilliant.
Sad and funny and sweet and all good things.
K
I love this, especially the idea of her looking down and laughing!
What a weird and perfect ending.
There is joy, sadness, and humor packed into this poem. Love it!
I love the intimate, confiding tone here and the honesty. Really like it a lot.
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