Ghost Tree Sirens

 
            The sirens sit in a green field
            and warble him to death
            with the sweetness of their song.
                  Homer, The Odyssey
 
Ghostly beeches in Winter’s crisp
      spread ochrous wings,
      and siren call,
 
“Come, we beseech
      and implore
      and beg and sing —
 
Leave the path and
      tramp the muddy ground
      through ferns and leaves.
 
Come beneath our wings,
      our pale protection,
      our comforting arms.
 
We’ll guard you
      from loblolly ghouls
      with heaven-piercing stems.
 
We’ll lay you down
      with softest rotting logs,
      and moldy turf,
 
And moss you over
      with fairest green
      like dripping sponge.
 
The anxious squirrel
      will race over you
      and rest content.
 
The worms beneath
      will squirm in peace
      and fear not the crow.
 
By us, you will
      sleep forever
      in Eden’s forest.”
 
      — Photo is a “ghost tree” beech
      in a loblolly pine forest near Chapel Hill, NC
 

Oak Leaves

 
He gazed at oak leaves
   whose serrations recalled,
 
As a young child
   in Humboldt County,
 
He’d seen, in the back of
   a logger’s pickup,
 
A beat-up crosscut saw,
   rusty, splintered handles,
 
Unused for decades,
   but still displayed,
 
A sign saying
   he could if he had to,
 
That old ways persisted,
   stubborn as ancient oaks.
 

Tree, dog, cat

tree_dog_catLumbering, misshapen, looming tree, no symmetry, favorite by far, visible for miles in my flat land, shading two unlikely litter mates — dog, ugly happy thing, flabby jowls, stubby legs, marching by sister cat — two same-day born beings, carried box to box by mothers, confused, unsure finally of offspring, form & laws of inheritance — he marches beside that creature dearest in his life, who in turn leaps into air, runs beneath dog belly, rolls in plowed earth of the great shared field — these three allies standing guard against sun, assassins, and tiny jewels floating in dusty rays.