Lee
You promised us five good years, and transformed the grounds
into a tangle of blossoms,
the flowers coming and going
with their different shapes and colors,
unerring as time: first the crocuses,
nosy and yellow, soon joined
by jittery violets making their
blue apologies for the long winter,
then tulips - red and yellow torches
whose conceit paled when the dogwood trees
tattooed the lawns pink and white.
How the garden glowed! It seemed to
expand in space as it grew
crowded with details of beauty,
each flower lifting its face to you,
to the gentle rain
from your watering can,
the roses halting their climb
up the lamp posts so you could
lash them loosely with string.
It always seemed to be summer - at least
summer is what I remember you in,
walking back and forth past these windows
pushing a wheelbarrow,
keys rattling on your hip, always
weeding or planting or pruning.
When you repaired the old cracked steps
stumbling up the hill, you etched
"Lee 1987" into a corner, as though
signing the painting of
paradise you created
to wrap around your life -
your legacy to us. I should have known,
as you kept walking through
the remaining years, that all along
you were planning your leavetaking,
with every step going
farther and farther away.