burgeons in the corner of the flowerbed
beneath the kitchen window, overgrown
in a part of the yard we rarely travel.
It blooms, wildly and unabashed,
a woman in her prime who has stopped worrying so much
for the niceties of a younger age,
sprawling and spreading where it has rooted
beneath the rosemary, shaded and sure-footed in soil,
branches like hair that has been loosed, and long,
restraint abandoned. We cut some for the kitchen
when we can no longer shop for more delicate flowers,
the length of its long arms– yellow and white budded–
fill the window with light and scent, it knows
its strong beauty is something indigenous here.