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| Fireweed loves the yard |
| and the fire that conjured it |
| into the light. |
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| And the scarlet elderberry |
| loves the old junkpile |
|             it leans against. |
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| The morning glory smothers everything |
| in an embrace: the fence, |
| the wood workbench, |
| the rusted steel. |
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| Here's a summer day that's so slow |
| even the light |
|             moves like honey; |
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| Daisies jump fences |
|             and then just mill around. |
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| Here's a cherry tree that's so rich |
| when it offers its heart to the birds, |
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| every cherry |
|             is a year of cherries. |
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