Bird in Tree: A Poem







Bird in Tree







Harder to explain the forthright perch

Of the moon in a sunned sky

To you, who asked no question to begin with;

Harder to catalog the ways that glisten

Is justified, given the war that’s on,

The sadness we have seen.




It is true:  I
cry over the stars I cannot see,

Over the wound of the peony against my heart

Over the dahlia that I leave to its own intrepid devices.

Over how you married me, after all,

Regardless of my dancing with my shadow,

And despite how the hat that I chose for the occasion

Forecast nothing of my desire.




What will happen if I die before I’ve had

My all of beauty, or if I die young:  What then?  

Might I entrust you with my urgency,

Entirely impractical as it is, and boring,

I’m sure it seems, given the facts of the matter:

The hour passes over and then by, and the moon

Is a beast in the sky, and seasons have their elucidations,

And the dahlia must be tamed.  Until then I will take




My living seriously. 
I will take my gardens and my bees,

My vestigial traces, my birds that return to the nests in
their trees

As signs.  And I
shall take you as my husband

For your hands are sweet and your cheeks are so perfectly
reclined,

And because little by little and more by more

My loving does not hurt you.







Many years ago, when writing poems was the only cure for my insomnia, I wrote "Bird in Tree."



When I read it again today I realized how abundantly true this poem remains. And it is a beautiful day out there. And so I share it.
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Published on August 16, 2013 03:35
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