A mothers plea
shivering light of the red giant
the weymouth’s pine stoops dimly,
casting pale shadows from the west.
through crumbled strains,
a calcified pile reaches ground cover.
colorless heaps catch a breeze,
turning to the wood,
your presence sensed,
fueling gentle wisps,
igniting a resentful gust of wind.
over what’s left, I sit.
loose grains remained,
coming up, I feel you
calling my name.
a voice much older,
whispering,
ascending a request.
“time ground me
against these wooden grains
as I lay here in this pine drape.
remanence of blood
plunged through my flesh,
escaping my mourning veins
every time I tried to come to you;
seeping and seeking refuge,
leaving me desolate
with only fear to cling onto.”
“I tried one summer
in the searing heat,
to taste the sweat the wood sap bled.
out from the deep,
in these expanding staves;
to be born again
of the white pine’s sugar.”
“but God stopped the sun
and Satan turned it red.
laying my tree low, to litter the soil.
with a broken soul’s purpose,
my spirit roared! rising
to clang on heaven’s gates. yet,
your heart had passed on me.”
“I tried to come to you
through thin cracks~
where the wind tapped.
within drops of rain,
feeding the garden beds
of potato and bean,
so that you could forage in spring.
yet all the glamor of it’s fruits
washed away~ clawing
outside the plots,
every day you came.”
“come. please.
turn this soil- take this seed.
let the last bit of me touch your skin.
with a voice fueled only by the
thick high-flown sky,
I ask for forgiveness.
let my plea nest in your mind,
to set you free; in your ears -
to chime and wake your heart.”
“you see, I’m in the space between~
waiting to come to rest in your peace.
to dwell forever, together.
and as you live on,
I can give beat to your heart
once more .... like when
I first became your mother.”