Sunflower, A Mercy
You scoop the root-clumped soil
from the cracking cup, break it up
with thumbs, nestle it into the hole
we’ve dug in the yard. Alone:
we each had a cup, a bud—mine
died. Yours will rupture the turf,
butter the sun to submission.
We season. The earth blooms
grace to take it back, & in, & I
hold in my palms the blossom’s weight
as you salvage what seeds remain.
How can you sit in the grass & ask
if we’d split off better, scatter-breezed,
& where you’d go, & where I’d go, to flower?
T. Dallas Saylor is a PhD student in poetry at Florida State University, and he holds an MFA from the University of Houston. His work meditates on the body, especially gender and sexuality, against physical, spiritual, and digital landscapes. He currently lives in Houston, TX.