Genesis Tree
In the beginning was no word. The earth spun neither evil nor good, guilty nor innocent. Words like hope and succor and sweetness had no tang to them, no truth. And out of a cave walks a man and with an air of whimsy and delight he names a star. Names it after his mother…
Poetry
In the beginning was no word.
The earth spun neither evil nor good,
guilty nor innocent. Words like hope
and succor and sweetness had no tang to them,
no truth. And out of a cave walks a man
and with an air of whimsy and delight he names a star.
Names it after his mother whose grave he decorated.
A bed of pine needles. Some colorful rags.
A symbol made of branches and bone
that would last forever, like her.
Birth was the first word perhaps.
Birth then death. The first man feels that sorrow,
that loss like no other. For the first man
standing above the first dead has no tradition,
no patrimony. Thus grief has no word.
A feeling. Standing over that rattle
without reason until the last breath.
Then the whole world in all its indignities
hangs in the air suspended by some serpent
god who toys with we mortals and laughs
and delights in it all. No love, no pity.
How could the man standing in a vast field
of wildflowers trampled underfoot
not wonder what doom and sorrow lay ahead?
Lightening. The snickering of angels.
A haughty coyote cackles in the distance
and the man wonders what other beasts
linger suspended in the night. A torch made
of a fallen branch, felled one hopes
from that same lightening,
glistening and making lanky shadows
of that one tree I see still. It never dies.
