My raspberries fruit twice -
once in July when the sun is high and hot,
when bees circumnavigate their busy route between blooms,
leaving me to reach between them for my breakfast -
and once in September, when dew hangs heavy on their leaves
and branches don't tolerate bending but, anticipating brittle cold,
snap when I lift them to peer underneath for the purpling berries hiding there.
My raspberries fruit twice -
once when still young and supple,
confident of many more risings and settings,
when, exposing their heads to the sky,
look unafraid toward productive tomorrows,
full of juice and beauty.
My raspberries fruit twice -
once when nearly done, while leave curl dark at their edges,
and their buds are almost spent,
nudged into fruit that may not have time to ripen.
These branches bend under accumulated weight,
grown from resisting the storms of a full season and
the weight of small, green berries that will not have time to redden.
My raspberries fruit twice -
early and late,
young and old,
carefree and wise,
innocent and full of days.
One life, one season,
producing what they can until one perfect frost cuts them off.
Taste one. These last berries are the sweetest.
That's how I know they are mine.
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