I didn't know the names of most,
other than the obvious, but I would take my time in that small corner shop
at Victoria and Grand, as if I had a plan,
of color and design, jagged stars
and spears of shifting green,
delicate faces receding into their
velvety folds, varieties you might not
expect to find side by side,
but that made sense to my willfully
uneducated eye, bringing them
home to surprise you with.
Though you tended to eschew tradition
of all kinds, you allowed me this
bit of old-fashioned courting,
a word I have since grown to love,
the shy earnestness and ritual behind it,
its long, noble history, the eternal doorstep
we eventually come to, hoping for entry.
Those days are long gone,
as are you, and there's nowhere
to bring you flowers now,
no patch of earth or marbled stone,
not even a vase upon this dusty bookshelf.
The shadows here move without shape;
the wind crowded with your absence.
I wish I could remember
the names of those flowers now,
each spectacular species from another world.
They would be my words, as my words
in turn would bloom for you,
dark and glistening with the earth,
declaring, in no small measure,
everything you must already know.