We will each take a picture of ‘Time’,  
here is mine — 
four fossils, a wristwatch, and flowers 
so go back 
two hundred million years,  
imagine a warm shallow sea 
where the ammonites lazily swim 
near the surface enjoying the sun 
while below on the dark sea bed 
the other two cosily snuggle 
with their kind 
in a blanket of soft warm mud. 
 
The flowers are forget-me-nots,  
they speak of love. 
They grow where it’s damp 
by the banks of becks and streams. 
Do you know how they came by their name?  
Once a girl to test out her lover 
pointed her hand to a clump 
on the bluff of a bank of a swift moving river,  
“Get me those”, she said with a frown,  
straightaway down the steep bank he scrambled,  
caught his foot in a root, tumbled down,  
was swept away by the torrent 
soon to drown. 
Faintly she heard his last words 
carry over the water so sadly 
“Oh my love, oh my love,  
forget me not.” 
 
Like little blue stars shining brightly 
the flowers only last for three days 
then fade and die. 
True love, though, is like the ammonite 
it shines bright still even after  
two hundred million years  
and laughs at Time!
Pete Crowther
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/forget-me-not-17/