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Morning Glories

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This poem is a gentle meditation on memory, love, and continuity. Its tone is peaceful, affectionate, and quietly reverent. What begins as a simple morning ritual—visiting a garden—slowly becomes an act of remembrance. The morning glories are not just flowers; they are living vessels of joy, connection, and inherited love.


The Garden as Sacred Space

The garden functions as a place of stillness and reflection. It is visited daily, suggesting routine, devotion, and mindfulness. This repetition mirrors how memory works—not loud or intrusive, but steady and enduring.

The garden is also a bridge between generations: a shared space where the past remains present.


Morning Glories as Symbols

Joy & Innocence

Morning glories are portrayed as playful and childlike:

  • “dance in the breeze”
  • “running and playing”

This personification gives them spirit and vitality, evoking innocence and freedom. They are not static objects—they are alive, expressive, and joyful.

Shyness & Intimacy

Describing them as “timid and shy” emphasizes their fleeting nature. Morning glories bloom briefly, often closing later in the day. This makes their beauty feel private and precious, shared only with those who are present early enough to notice.

The phrase “intimate parties in early morn” suggests quiet celebration—beauty that doesn’t need an audience to exist.


Sensory Richness

The poem is deeply sensory:

  • Sight: glowing colors, rainbow splashes
  • Touch: velvet softness, dew
  • Sound: “music of dawn”

These layered details slow the reader down, mirroring the slow unfolding of morning itself. The sun “kissing the dew” reinforces tenderness and care, making nature feel loving rather than indifferent.


Pride & Awakening

The repeated emphasis on opening—“opening their eyes”—suggests awakening, presence, and quiet confidence. The flowers don’t rush; they bloom when ready, proud simply to exist in the light.

This can be read as a subtle lesson in living: showing up fully, without hurry or pretense.


The Shift to Memory

The final stanza gently pivots from observation to remembrance.

“grandma loved the morning glories”

This line is simple, unadorned, and deeply effective. It grounds all the earlier beauty in personal history. The flowers become emotional heirlooms—carriers of a loved one’s joy.

The smile remembered is more important than the flowers themselves. The garden becomes a place where love continues to bloom even after loss.


Key Themes

  • Nature as memory keeper
  • Intergenerational love
  • Beauty in quiet moments
  • Impermanence without sadness
  • Joy that endures through remembrance

Emotional Impact

The poem’s power lies in its restraint. It doesn’t mourn loudly; it remembers gently. There is no grief-heavy language—only gratitude and affection. The smile at the end feels earned, like a soft closing note that lingers.


In the context of your other poems

This piece feels like a moment of peaceful integration within your broader work. Where other poems confront fear, pain, or protection, this one rests. It suggests healing not through struggle, but through attention—by noticing what still blooms and who loved it before you.

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