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Birmingham gardens (Prose Poem) by INTRANSIT
It is good that I have come early while
spring is still serene. I know how outrageous
and demanding she can be. Listening, I hear Whitman running
through the tall trees like a small child playing
hide and seek with the birds and I can just barely
smell the death of fall. I'm still too quick to
pay a fountain for something it cannot give until
a hot summer day while I wait for the exchange
of stone to grass. At thirty-seven, I'm now aware
of the specific gravity of my footsteps on the
gravel path and I notice the veins running through
the bark of the trees and I look at the veins in
my arm. It's good to be like moss, the forgotten
undergrowth, or a fanning pinecone next to a
joking oak. Before I go, I take the time to watch
the Koi eagerly gulping in the sliced-tomato sun's
color as it warms us both.
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