Ozark flowers coat the roadside with a quiet bloom
of blue and violet. The yellow bursts find room
between the grasses, grab at rays of falling light.
I look out driving home and ponder how despite
rain and grazing deer lives their resilience, their denial
of removal. Blossoms last till morning, bring a smile,
show me how much I need stems cracking slabs
of concrete, springstruck life. Parked, I pick scabs
off my arm and picture our survival. How flowers
here resemble folks so beautiful they cannot
help but dance alone in quiet rooms. Who sway
together, knit a field nobody else can scythe.
Night swells, but we don’t stop taking shafts of
deserved sun. We hold our brilliance in dim hours.