Flames of corrugated leaves flaunt
in our friend’s aluminum planter
outside the oldest cinema
in New Hampshire. We can’t name
this plant, but it looks expensive
and arrogant, striking a pose
against which crimson flowers
slash the humid summer glare.
You wouldn’t want such power
unfolding in our own back yard
but like to see it downtown
abutting a parking lot crammed
with autos we couldn’t afford.
This floral critique reminds us
that almost every passing moment
pollinates the moments to come.
These big leaves will linger after
the first and most tentative frosts,
but must uproot and move along
before winter disgraces them.
Storms due on Thursday may punish
with hail but won’t humble them.
Moviegoers may snuff a few
cigarettes in the planter, but slobs
lack the aesthetic counterpoint
to effect the enabling emotion
lurking in larger cosmic views.
You pluck a butt from the soil
and grind it into the asphalt.
Our friend arrives with her dog,
who approves of us by wagging
and rolling to offer his belly.
While I’m busy playing with the dog
our friend murmurs a Latin name
that I hear as striata flamma
Doesn’t matter. You and she discuss
the subtle drama of gardening
while I consider rolling around
the parking lot with the dog,
baring my brazen lack of roots.
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