Apparition
My hunger grows
for the farmer’s bread.
I dreamt last night the scent
still lingered at the ford,
off the river ~ in the air,
blown by old stone,
rising out into the wide countryside.
Further I reached towards lost cities,
abided, yet hidden in structure.
I envisaged saluting monuments,
though I sensed
their essence remained.
The smell of dust
settles in my slumber,
the grime of war rinses
but few when it rains.
And I am old, used to decay;
the scent clings to my nostrils.
I am as old as the hills
they rose from. Plainly,
I can still taste the sediment
of my country’s crust,
a calcareous soil,
too dried up to bear its own fruits.
The trails, along the coastline
have been brined and aged
for some time. Soaked
in that erosion,
I became aware of waves
mislaying their energy,
changing winds
leaving behind only caves,
upon notches,
upon cliffs.
Exposed stone shapes,
jagged and sharp
along the water's edge,
have long been rinsed clean
of the screeches
from sea-clawing gulls,
harrowed in their contention
for the last meal.
My impetus draws
distant memories,
reminiscing of shorelines
so striking—
a presence so youthful.
So let me die here.
Let me rest forever
in this slumber,
as I remember and lay
on hills of another’s land.
Let me rest my eyes on sights
that could have been mine.
Feed me your bread
from the farmer’s field.
Cover me
in your coat of arms,
protect me amongst the
luscious fir trees;
before the charge of my
castle walls, before it all comes
crashing down when I wake.
~ Jessi