Blue by Danielle Page
Blue is a woeful flower
so small that it gets lost
among his brothers in the field,
with drops of white that
beg the pollinators to visit.
Blue is a burgeoning flower
for his stem, while gentle,
digs deeply in the soil
soaking and searching
reaching and remembering—
Blue is as tall as the sun
in his heart. He serves the same purpose
as the cackling crows and the mossed boulder.
His place in the field is as vital as the
Rock that stuffs the dam’s roaring river.
Blue is a flower.
Dotted, thin, and fine.
Meant for the reflection of the divine.
Danielle Page is a truth-teller and graduate student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Originally a Yankee in the South, she’s now learning midwestern ways. When she’s not reading up on composition theory, she’s scribbling in her Moleskine journal or hiking a mountainous trail. Her work has appeared in the Whale Road Review, The Voices Project, and Pacific Poetry.