|  | Nasturtium Nasturtium in a round plastic pot
 hung by the front door, the year I left
 New York for good. Its soft geranium
 leaves pale green, trailing; its bellflowers
 fragrant as orange plums. Now I'm packed
 
 to move to another house. Will I remember
 the curve of river birch trunks twining
 beside the sunporch chaise, the palmlike leaves
 caressing screens? I can't bear the smell
 of morning hanging here, the way the past
 wafts in, its fog ghosts rising. Nothing
 
 so sweet as forsaken apples, my father said,
 biting into the core of wild fruit
 as we walked the six acres chest high
 in hay awaiting its final cutting,
 October frost in the air, the season turning
 autumn to winter, sharp as a scythe.
 
 We never know where we will find the thing
 that breaks our heart, that orange memory,
 that perfumed resonance, Nasturtium
 how it murders us with scent,
 how it leaves us rocking.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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