The Trees

For Dr. Cathy Sepko



She saw the light first as a little girl


In the hard knuckle granite of West Virginia –


A distant fire in a snowy wood


Filled with the paddings of foxes,


Crickets in the indigo dusk.


 


She learned to read the braille of wood bark


Leading toward that flame,


The rust of sky heavy on the trees.


 


Can you hear them? she would call to us,


Can you hear the songs of old?


The wide winds of rhythm,


The open mouth of the moon


Cooing along the quiet river?


 


She taught us in the forest


To feel the poems in the pines,


To dig our teeth deep into the dirt to taste the earth.


 


She taught the rocks to rhyme,


Pressed a shard of coal into the stone


To carve her spot in time.


 


And now, she sits on a smooth stump before the fire


Surrounded by the faces of a generation,


Ten thousand family trees


Singing softly in the starlight, leaning in to listen


As she warms her tired feet.


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Published on December 10, 2016 16:00
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