Dead Flowers in a Fresh Mason Jar
White roses grew
from mountain earth
behind my Mamaw’s home.
She sighed, they bloomed too few.
But still, I found them worth
the plucking. I strayed to roam
through grapevines, tall oaks,
hillsides wrapped in briars,
dirty hands full of forbidden flowers.
Mamaw yelled to my folks,
unable to dim my childlike desires.
I sat with painted water for hours
waiting for chosen roses to color.
Purple—Mama’s favorite.
I gifted her my happy mess, smile wide.
Blind to how life fades duller.
Blind to how I should savor it.
Blind to how things collide.
Mama kept dead flowers in a fresh mason jar,
dark and wilted, like her swollen hand.
A single waterlogged stem.
Mama would say, “Look how sweet these are.”
She only knew love, could not understand
even dead things will thirst if you let them.
10 thoughts on "Dead Flowers in a Fresh Mason Jar"
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Oh my heart! Absolutely beautiful last lines to seal a wonderful poem.
Thank you for your kind thoughts!
Splendid, splendid, and perfect rendition of a woman I knew who used her apron for gathering all things great or small…
Thank you! Happy you think so! Sounds like there’s a poem waiting to be written about that woman and her apron.
Gorgeous work. I love the compressed storytelling of “Mama kept dead flowers in a fresh mason jar,/dark and wilted, like her swollen hand.”
Thank you for reading and your kind words, Shaun!
Jazmine, you continue to have powerful messages in your poetry!
Thank you, John!
love:
even dead things will thirst if you let them.
Thank you! I enjoyed that line as well.