Rowan
By onemorething
- 2247 reads
Poem 7 for Day 7 of National Tree Week. This poem is for Lynn Valentine and Jane Cornwell on Twitter.
The dead stay dead
for a rowan tree -
only the ghosts of gods
remain, caught by blackbirds
who, on glut of berries,
sing their spells, runecut
into its wood. A quickbeam
is a wanderer, solitary, and
snarled into being, of tor
and wayside, is wicken
for spindles, blossom
for bee bread. But
bare, frostlit with starlight,
tempted by Springlight,
I think a lonely rowan might
still talk to mountains.
Image is from here: https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Rowan_Tree_on_Feinn_Loch_-_Kilmelford_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1552611.jpg
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I love how you look at this
I love how you look at this tree Rachel, how it's solitary and snarled into being, of tor and wayside are wicken for spindles, blossom for bees bread. But bare, frostlit with starlit. You describe something quite mysterious and magical about this tree.
I will miss these tree poems. Look forward to them each day.
Thank you for sharing.
Jenny.
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we've a few rowan around.
we've a few rowan around. Some are used as hedging. I don't know if it's cold enough for the birds to feed on the berries yet. They are associalted with druids, or so I heard, not knowing any, actual, druids.
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I love "snarled into being"
I love "snarled into being" too! Though rowan trees here are not snarled at all, they are elegant and sleek weighed down with vermillion berries like seedful jewels
am so going to miss these tree poems :0) Am glad you did rowans, they are my favourites after beeches and apples. You have done them all proud!
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I love how trees are
I love how trees are associated with so much myth and history. Rowans are such beautfiul trees - Di's right and you have done them proud. I think there's some tradition about planting one near your house - for good fortune. Perhaps that's just Suffolk though. Thank you for this wonderful series - yes please do set a theme again - it's been brilliant!
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This is our very well
This is our very well deserved Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day!
Please share/retweet if you enjoyed it as much as I did, and take a look at our new Inspiration Point which I've pinched from onemore's brilliant tree series
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Ah, that's my daughter's
Ah, that's my daughter's middle name and one of my favourite trees. I think you've paid a fine tribute to this beautiful tree, covering all of it's characteristics. I love to watch the blackbirds downing the berries in one. 'Solitary wanderers', yes, you rarely see them in the company of other trees, normally alone at the edge of a meadow, exposed. The name will always remind me of The Wicker Man and for that, I love it even more.
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I believe trees are the solution
I believe trees are the solution to our global warming problem and can reverse the process I have very good reasons.
Think of a tree as a factory, absorbing light energy and converting carbon dioxide and water through photosynthesis into carbon and organic foods, and oxygen, instead. In fact removing carbon-dioxide again from the atmosphere and replenishing oxygen. What more do you want?
Gives shade and it is beautiful and no waste just runs for free all you have to do is plant it. Plant hundreds, plant thousands, plant millions. It is essentially free you just do it. But we have been doing exactly the opposite with the fossil fuels.
Although I have to admit that most of this already happens in the oceans, mostly algae, and other plants.
All this talk of trees reminds me of Dogmatix in the Asterix stories! Enjoyed the poem but I don't think I have ever seen such a Rohan tree.
Keep well! Tom Brown
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