The Grand Yew - All Saints' Church
By bhi
- 763 reads
I visit this graveyard often,
the gravid whispers of the dead verdant,
rising from beneath the long unkempt grass
to commune with the wind touched trees,
leaves trembling under the unfleshed force.
I listen resting on the plaqued bench –
“For J.J. Berryman, Husband
To Margaret, Father to John and Craig” –
shaded by the dark canvas of the Grand Yew,
for seven centuries a guardian
standing at the Gate of the Dead,
guiding all souls through, as all are worthy,
shaped from the first innocent breast.
Its trunk - ravaged, twisted and split,
by the entropic cuts of time and men
still, through some wondrous mechanism,
continues to feed its green canopy -
now stands fenced to protect it from
the casual vandalism
of school children passing to and from
The Howard, host to the opposite of solitude,
but they too, in time, will fall beneath its spell
and tread the path mapped by its prescient sprigs.
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Comments
Graveyards seem a real
Graveyards seem a real inspiration for poetry. Another top poem, bhi (love that second line, in particular)
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Beautifully written, very
Beautifully written, very evocative. Yew trees do have their own special magic. I also liked the reference to the 'plaqued bench'. It's a very different context, but there are several such benches in a park I visit often, and it always feels like a very generous and welcoming memorial.
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