Moving Away from the Tyranny of the Wreath
A sheaf is not a wreath. A sheaf is longer. It has an arch which raises it up off the. A sheaf is more like a bouquet. A sheaf is on its way to a bouquet. A bouquet needs water which goes perhaps too far. A bouquet can look very sad on a. A bouquet can look very sad wilted. A wreath can look too set. We all know what a wreath means. We do not like to carry a wreath. A wreath rests on a. That's all there is to it. A wreath lies on a after. A wreath is bound in such a way that it takes a long time to disintegrate. It lies on a and stubbornly resists disintegration but does thin and shrink like the wreath below unwreathing too, slowly, reluctantly letting go. A bouquet is going too far. But a sheaf, a sheaf is discreet. It just arches slightly, like so, off the. It doesn't need water but it's not a closed system, it's not signed sealed and delivered like a wreath. It is cosmopolitan, not a bouquet but you know it has known bouquets and has been placed near them in stores and could have been a bouquet and almost is in the right light or another context. That's it: a sheaf can have other possible contexts, not so a wreath.
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