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Eleven Decaying Roses
Eleven decaying roses hung their heavy heads in shame on my dinner table,
Smothering each other for air,
stems trying to soak up every last bit of the turbid water left.
Their stems struggling to bear the weight of their petals--
Knowing, seeing, wishing they hadn’t
Their faces--wrinkled and dried out with age--
On the verge of crumbling into dust or breaking apart with a touch.
But
maybe,
Into the compost they go,
In with the rotten red cabbage, fall’s old pumpkins, bruised apples, lunchtime orange peels.
In with the forgotten, the lost, the old;
The squishy, the battered the bruised.
How will they fare?
I wish I knew,
I leave them be,
Tossed into the compost, the bouquet a bride throws on her wedding day,
Joyfully, but not with the intention to remember them later.
I come back to my dying roses months later
It’s springtime now, the daisies have taken over.
I stir my compost,
Earthen, brown, beautiful,
And catch a glimpse of a single petal.
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Maria Tan is a Fort Wayne based creator. She spends her time reading, running, hiking, playing cello, and trying to squeeze in some writing. She loves WS Merwin and Whitman.