A golden shovel from Emily Dickinson's "A lane of Yellow led the eye"
April called me to Ball Ground, Georgia on A day born delicate for daffodils. Two lane heartstrings, a mid-spring splendor state of mind. Spaciously alone, I curve Yellow Creek Road toward Gibbs Gardens, then led by footpath through Torii Gate, the entry for "Tsukiyama," Japanese Garden; my eye a window to the silence of Bonsai Juniper, unto resilience wept on water by willows, a space of cultural harmony serenaded by purple martin, balanced by man-made and natural: wood, stone, sculptures, and bridges. I strolled, one whose essence renewed among cherry trees, blossoms soft in valley; then I trekked strong up hillsides, inhabitants, rivers of daffodils flowing down golden and white to meet where the only purpose is simply to scent air and be seen. I returned in isolated summer to flora whose grace surpasses sheltering in place, waterlilies below Monet bridge, solitude.
Jennifer Susan Smith, a retired speech-language pathologist, resides in Rock Spring, Georgia. Her work appears in Mildred Haun Review, Appalachia Bare, Troublesome Rising Digital Anthology 2025 and Sunflowers Rising: Poems for Peace Anthology, among others. Jennifer holds membership in Poetry Society of Tennessee, Georgia Poetry Society and Chattanooga Writers’ Guild.