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It begins with the scent of geraniums,
bitter and hard,
and my grandmother telling me not to touch
because she is afraid I will pick them
and me wondering how this flower
(so harsh in my nose)
could be the crown of her patio —
though she was not much of a gardener,
as I would come to learn.
It begins with the scent of geraniums,
bitter and glassy,
and the old man at the end of the street
wading through his dark, wide garden,
surrounded by thick, geranium-soaked air
and a wild assortment of snapdragons
(which we each pick
so we can make the dragon growl),
and bending over the fence
to hand us our annual maple saplings —
which we plant with due care
and which our fathers
will inevitably mow over.
It begins with the scent of geraniums,
bitter and ancient,
as I pot up the front entryway.
The sun burns my arms,
my eyes squint,
and I look up to wonder
how I have come to depend
on that sharp perfume
as the welcome oracle
of so many ambivalent possibilities.
Ah, geraniums! The national window-box flower of Germany. 🙂
I love the visual details, especially the second stanza, I can see it so clearly–the old man wading through his plants. Also love the gentle humor and the repetition.
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Thank you! I did not know I was tapping into a national treasure. 🙂
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Love this poem, my home is surrounded by geraniums that blossom all year round
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Well, first, thank you for your kind complement. Second, I am jealous that you have flowers blooming all year! We have had a very Duluth-style winter and spring here in Chicago, which makes me especially jealous. Promise not to hold that against you. Thanks again for your note!
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