Log Rhythm
(David)
Gently, dawn whispers into the mist;
imagines fleeting shadow shapes
in voile scarf-skin;
drops lighted silk drapes
from a glistening canopy,
skirting and flirting around the boles
of forbidding tree trunks,
teasing and pleasing
to dryadic creaking;
revealing a log:
a hollow log of deadwood,
cave-in full of leaf mould,
home to generations of tiny horrors,
a fossilized image of former splendour
living a kind of life
after a kind of death,
outside time,
unaffected by seasons
yet painfully aware
of every tick and every tock.
Shafts of virgin sunlight
pierce the glowing haze,
sear away the negligee,
bind the dryads until dusk.
Night surrenders all to day.
A butterfly dances in a beam,
dressed in golden, molten honey:
grace and beauty,
lighter than a feather,
breathtaking choreography.
Can a log hold breath?
Can a hollow log,
outside time,
conceive of the urgency
in a brief life of beauty?
Can a log wish so hard
that the grass around it scorches?
Can a butterfly hear that wish,
or does she simply, lightly, land
and kiss the smiling log to sleep?
Gently, evening draws a velvet curtain
Over the ticking earth.
Mist issues from the soil
and playful wisps caress the dryads
until even they notice the hush, and still.
In a hollow log,
in a pocket of leaf mould,
new life has been born.
A seed has been planted:
a buddleia seed.