A companion poem to Katya the Poet's "Sister Tree". |
| November ice numbs her withering limb, offering comfort but not cure. When Grandmother is eighty-nine and tired she tosses threadbare garments of youth to forest floor donning bark & branch alone to stretch the sky. Her paper skin is perfect on the edge of storm's sigh; brittle bones beat thundercloud drum, keeping rhythm with its rain. There is no wrinkle in her dance. Borne along by promises of kite, star, cherubic song; summer's strength is sapped by weightless winter whisper. A shiver. Releasing root, four generations of standing permanence unbend across the riverbed, crushing neighbor elm and buried bulb and mushroom: virgin horizontal, her weightless rest exquisite and the wheel spinning round. |