
I had time and I didn’t have you so I thought maybe a garden
Some distraction in the patch of shade beside the patio
To keep me busy (as though busy wasn’t always the problem)
The plants were delivered as sleeping bits of bare root and
I placed them in brand new soil
Marked each with a plastic sign labelled in permanent green
Tucked them in beneath a blanket of mulch
Surrounded all with a little wall as if I was in control
I carried water from inside every day, three trips of two gallons each
Because the outside spigot didn’t work and penance feels good sometimes
Every day I got on my hands and knees with my eye to the ground
Watching for any sign of bright growth
It was the sort of thing I would self-mockingly document for you
And bathe in your delight at my details
After weeks the sprouting began and then anxiety flowered
Because squirrels and chipmunks like to dig and
Snails and slugs have late-night dinners and
Each morning I woke up to find a mushroom farm
I paid these problems to go away but still
Nothing grew taller than my hand before dying
Leaves curl and wilt the same with too much water or too little
Tricky business when the air is feverish and dry for weeks
Shallow planting or soil leached empty by the trees or
My trying to grow too late, as usual
All I know is I have a garden of little tombstones
And nothing to do but wait for the snow