Lavandula
by Shawn McCann
Listen to me: I know
the winter gloom in
mid-summer,
to be buried in dark earth,
unable to move.
When you cut my
pinnately toothed
leaves, a succulent spice
you crave, that purple word
that rolls off your tongue
in holy oil. Wearing my
whorls around your neck
to protect you from the world.
My essence splashes
your skin, a fragrant musing
of the suffering you’re in—
I feel your ache,
I see it in your gaze
as you tend to my banes,
to watch me fade away,
that which you call death.
You do not remember, but
I will speak again; oblivion
will not take my last breath.