White Lobelia

Little megaphones,

we hang out in the garden center and gossip

with the petunias three seasons a year.

With leaves too small to resemble

thumbs or hands or hearts, too soft

for any parts

of our threadable stems to grow thorns,

we prefer to pretend we are horns,

cornets and alto sax, prepared to assemble

in studios and sight-read any charts.

We are, of course, for sale

to generous homes. Some of us have become

almost overfamiliar with ornamental

cabbage, with the ins and outs of kale.

Others have lost our voice

in a painstaking effort to justify our existence

as a perennial second choice.

Like you, we dismiss whatever comes easiest

to us and overestimate what looks hard.

In our case that means we admire

our neighbors’ luxuriant spontaneities

and treat the most patient preparers with disregard.

We strive for contentment in our

hanging baskets once

we know we will not touch ground.

We tell ourselves

and one another that if you listen

with sufficient

generosity, you will be able

to hear our distinctive and natural sound.