The Tree
She looked at me. Looked hard.
"Dude...it's just a tree."
I looked at the tree. Looked hard.
It was, indeed, just a tree.
A dying tree
Whose naked limbs reached to the sky
As though pleading for mercy
The insects had won
It's bark, like flesh
Burrowed through
Falling to the ground in shredded rains
As though preparing the ground at its trunk
An ironic burial blanket
The worms had won
Devouring,
Impatient
In a world that is just and fair
We are allowed to return to ground
Before they claim dominion
"It's just a tree!"
Her voice had grown impatient
Like the appetite
Of the beasts that consumed.
I wondered
If like the trees
They had found purchase within her
Eating away
Swallowing imagination
Washing it down
With the joy that made life worth living.
Leaving her merely existing
Content to see a tree
As just a tree.
Natasha Head
Comments
That image of the dying tree, the worms burrowing their way through, and then the comparison with the 'way of all flesh' - quite a harrowing poem, actually.