ALL IN ITS OWN TIME
All in its own time, the foxglove
blooms, one of many seeds sewn
late in this petite garden—
never having had the chance
to greet the forsythia,
but that’s the way it always is.
All on their own, the rainbows
of zinnias and bright violet bee balms
fed the bees—the bees who buzzed
life into this world— while we leaned
into chairs and goals— alliterated,
altered, dreamt poetic lines of hopes
and despairs of our world—
All in our own creative joy
and inspirations— but in June,
not all in and of itself,
not all alone, we’ve bloomed
bouquets— All in this garden
of diverse scents and florals,
all in our own time,
yet all together, whole.
6 thoughts on "ALL IN ITS OWN TIME"
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You give us a sense of garden as universe. I love the descriptions/varieties of the flora, “diverse scents and florals, all in our own time, yet all together.”
This is lovely, but had you considered not repeating the title in your first line and letting the title “kickstart” the poem? Think about it. Philip Larkin was a master at this.
Thank you for these sensory details!
This is so lovely! I love how we move from “All in its own time, the foxglove/blooms…” to the no-resigned but knowing “but that’s the way it always is.” then brought out to a wider place with “In June… we’ve bloomed…”
You had a very creative idea for a poem, and carried it through with good word choices!
Gorgeous poem.
Especially love:
the rainbows
of zinnias and bright violet bee balms
fed the bees—the bees who buzzed
life into this world—
The last stanza is magical Stirring all the sights and sounds of June’s garden into a savory stew..