Raspberries, Preserved
July 8, 1998
The weather's turned hot again
with the reddening. We pick them in morning
and put them to chill
until the heat of the day calls for pause;
sit on the deck with beads of plumpness
in white bowls of milk.
My father liked them with sugar
and fresh cream. Mother bottled them
in clear quarts - ruby reflections
in the slant light of the cellar.
When we were children, we traveled fifty miles
to Bear Lake to pick our year's store:
ate what we could hold in mountain air
above copper-blue waters.
They were tartness under the suns
of first-crop hay, jams of plenty
on loaves sliced thick.
And through Wyoming winters
they remain ... summer distilled
through any long cold.