Someone left a bouquet of field flowers by my door. Flowers picked along a country lane.
Years ago, my granddaughter picked a fistful of English daisies that insisted on growing on the lawn. They were not weeds for me, and for a day they smiled at me from the glass where I had put them.
Once someone gave me a rose stolen from a neighbor’s garden. It was the beginning of a love affair.

Yet in the long run, what touched me just as much was the bouquet of field flowers left anonymously by my door. Flowers picked along a country lane. Sky blue chicory, that in less than an hour had already withered into nothing, but that held within itself the summer sun, convolvulus or bindweed, although I prefer calling them wild morning glories, thrusting its roots deep down into a hostile rocky soil, and a host of golden stars sprinkled among the grass.

None of the roses and lilies and carnations wrapped in cellophane by a florist can compete with these humble straggly flowers that have grown wild and are imbued with a beauty and a meaning all their own.
Along a road in summer
Cerulean chicory lines the road,
ragged flecks torn from the sky.
Spikes of yellow mullein branch into
menorahs of golden stars with hearts of flame.
Vanguards of creeping dwarf convolvulus
insinuate their way between the stones,
encroach on asphalt, dot shorn roadside banks.
Pale rosy faces greet the morning sun,
pleated cornucopias barely tinged with pink
close in upon themselves once noon is past.
The mint has gone all straggly.
Pallid clustered calyxes of bladder campion
pinch in their mouths where rocket bursts
of curling petals make way for shooting stamen sprays.
Chalices so deep none but the nocturnal moth
can drink its nectar.
Madder violet brushstrokes
have left their mark upon the deep-lobed petals
of the lowly mallow, a lighter mauve,
whose dark green cinquefoil leaves
stand rank against the fence.

One is tempted
to stoop down and pick
a sprig of chicory,
hoping, once one is home,
to imprison summer in a vase.
Illusion, for in less than an hour
that sky-blue flower
will have shrivelled
and withered into a grey rag.
It is along the road that summer lingers on
with hosts of blossoms ever ready to
supplant those, in their turn expendable,
whose brief term of existence lasts but a day.
Wild things, of whatever nature,
are best left free.
This is beautiful 😍 thank you so much! Rina Rachel Sondhi
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I love these images and the memories they evoke! Surely something will be in bloom to welcome me in October! James the 2nd
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Oh, my! I don’t know where to begin to comment on this bouquet of words. So many surprising combinations of color and mood!: “Menorahs of golden stars with hearts of flame.” A vain effort to “imprison summer in a vase.”
Although it speaks of temporality, it is timeless—a wild thing in itself.
— from Diane, a fellow fan of words and weeds
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“A rose by any other name would smell as sweet,” but this bouquet of words smells sweeter!
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beautiful Erika. Thanks for sharing.
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Now that is a truly beautiful gesture! What a generous act on the part of your anonymous neighbour. I love the poem that it inspired too.
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Erika
words that flow and ripple like a song of wild flowers!
James
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I do not consider myself to be wild, but I do enjoy being free. Mike
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a new reader
from the distant past
enjoys
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Thank you, Who are you, mysterious reader from the past?
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Dear Erika, like others, am awed and inspired by the cornucopia of memories, sights and scents which your words evoke of walks through meadows and hills in distant days, in distant lands.
ATTILLA
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