Elegy

It was thunderstorming when you died, 

summer rain, my face wet all week. 

Steam slithered at my ankles. Earlier,

I had watched clouds turn

the blue pond green. How strange

to cry in June, to be in the world’s garden 

without you. In the hospital light,

my green dress was blue. Tall flowers, 

like priests, above the bed

dropped a thumbprint of pollen

onto your forehead. Seasons ago

we knelt together, burying bulbs

in earth. Only grief knows

what color the lilies will be next

year, when they come back.

Natasha Rao is the author of Latitude, which won the 2021 APR/Honickman First Book Prize. She teaches poetry at Drew University.
Originally published:
June 8, 2026

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