Nature Notes
This is a book.
Look child,
this is a tree.
See honeyed chocolate wood, smooth
flowing through trunk and branches,
a candelabra wearing a hair snood of mint green leaves,
each taken from the master leaf in the artist's eye.
Trunk, branch and leaf; brown and green,
the untruth by which all trees are known.
This too is a book.
A guide to the truth of trees
as found in the British Isles.
Each page proclaims: I am born of wood, out of tree,
my history bleached white, made ready
for the lie of a likeness of my kin.
From this taxonomy of fine indian ink line,
loose leaf bound with words, circumnavigated
by averages of height and breadth
a name can be conjured,
no more substantial than the rustle
of paper.
Listen.
Here is oak.
Here is yew.
Ash, willow, beech and birch.
They are but whispers, no more solid
than psalms at vespers.
Here is truth.
You must forget all you know,
or believe to be true.
I am tree.
Forever upstretched to pray,
sway and pray, unceasing without rest,
a wind song to heaven.
Feet corralled at birth, earth cosseted;
rooted to time, to the pin prick
of my death, a whole life bound
to contemplation, the solitude
of a monk.
I am tree.
I travel time, enduring.
I see the sun rise, I see the sun set.
The seasons which mould my heart
come and go.
I have seen your fleetness of foot,
the quickness of spirit flaring
full of importance, looking to make a mark,
but you are like the breeze
skipping over the world.
You are here
and then you are gone;
a sometime sparkle of light.
I am tree
Come stand with me.
Be still, reach your arms round,
anchor your fingers,
let my corrugations scent your fingerprints.
Come closer, trunk to trunk.
Turn your head, lay your cheek like a lover
against my body, close your eyes,
tune the antennae of your palms
ready to receive communion.
I will offer you the weight of my history,
the measure of my spirit,
the song of the earth which runs
through my core.
I will sing to your heart a hymn like no other.
Then you will know me.
I am tree.
©Malcolm Cooke 2020
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