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Woman and Her Wayward Garden

Text of Poem

Maples and oaks turn scarlet,
grapes ripen, walnuts litter the ground,
the empty fields of October
fold their hands and grow quiet,
but the sun sheds warmth of another season
and signs of spring haunt my garden.
As if drowsy roots woke in their beds
an iris blooms, the syringa yields
one white flower, a forsythia branch
shows yellow stars, a lilac swells its buds,
and I am left, a wayward gardener
with green thoughts on an autumn day.

First Line
Maples and oaks turn scarlet,
Original Pub Location
Original Publication Date
1975
Original Citation
Dry Leaves. Holly Springs, MS: Ragnarok Press. 1975.
Complete Poems
286
Hearst Collections
Word Count
79
Poetic Form
open
Bibliographic Notes

No page numbers in Dry Leaves?

Observations
Listed in the TOC as Woman and Her Wayward Garden, but listed on the page as A Woman and Her Wayward Garden, as it is in the Ward Bibliography and The Complete Works
Themes
Twitter Quote
the syringa yields / one white flower, a forsythia branch / shows yellow stars, a lilac swells its buds