Lime Tree
By onemorething
- 5965 reads
Ideas of fate can cow you,
and once, bowed and scarred by these,
I lived in a lime tree until I knew all the shallow fissures
and ridges of its linden wood, until I knew
each leaf, heart-shaped, was faithless
in the saw-edges of its green serration.
And I have heard it said that everything happens for a reason,
that events are destined - till every decency,
every abomination is homogenised -
this slavery of a belief
is the condemnation of the abused.
Disempowered, I passed all verdicts
dressed as a grey cloaked cuckoo,
all offerings brought before my tangerine eye,
though no bough could bear the weight of my consequences.
Here the small deaths of bees mid-harvest
scattered the herniated roots beneath
where even they have been misled by the bladed sweetness
of its blossom, when the sacrifices of these singing drones
wrested me from this bloom of shade.
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Comments
Stunning. Drew.
Stunning.
Drew.
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Thanks for explaining. I did
Thanks for explaining. I did wonder...
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Just wonderful!. This is our
Just wonderful!. This is our pick of the day - do share.
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stunning - what a perfect
stunning - what a perfect pick. Onemore, I'm so pleased you're managing to keep on writing!
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This bit, in the middle of
This bit, in the middle of all the trance inducing greenery like a dagger in a soft hand:
every decency,
every abomination is homogenised -
this slavery of a belief
that is the condemnation of the abused.
Disempowered
And the cuckoo does change fate, I had not thought of that before, but it is frightening, sinister, to have overturned what has been planned and treasured and hide what has been done
There is a weird feeling of being drugged or confusion, like what kills the bees. And instead of a bright sun, in this green sky the cuckoo's orange eye
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Poem of the Week!
This stunning piece is our Poem of the Week. Congratulations!
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This is our Poem of the Month
This is our Poem of the Month - Congratulations!
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Fantastic! I started reading
Fantastic! I started reading this once before and was distracted by something. I love that middle section, too. It carries so much wisdom. I've read and re-read Sophocles' Oedipus Rex and some good commentary on it. This whole "fate" thing. But your proposition here is different to that (unless I'm mistaken), like fate can take the blame that ought to be carried by free agents.
Anyway, that's just me thinking about the middle section. The first and last parts with those lovely observations on nature (cuckoo, poor bees) are wonderful to read, and lodge in the memory.
Finally, keep rolling down that hill and gathering ideas and writerly inspiration. It's a joy to read them.
Parson Thru
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