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In your bleeding cross-section I count three centuries of wooden wisdom since that mother cone dropped on soil no one owned. Black bears scratched backs against your young bark. Ohlone passed peacefully on their path to the waters of La Honda Creek. In my lifetime you groaned. Your bark filled with beetles. Woodpeckers drilled, feasted. Needles, whole limbs, you shed your clothes, stood naked. I cut your flesh. You walloped the earth, creating a trench two hundred feet long where you lie. As you fell in your fury you destroyed my tomatoes, smashed the daffodils, snapped a dogwood. Better you crush my garden than my house which did not exist nor any of this town when you first advanced one tender green. I want to believe the sawtooth less cruel than another winter of storms. All good fathers must fall. Your children surround you, waving, blocking the light. My children count rings, hands sticky with sap.
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Jan 22, 2017
Jan 22, 2017 at 4:15 PM UTC
Autopsy of a Douglas Fir
In your bleeding cross-section I count three centuries of wooden wisdom since that mother cone dropped on soil no one owned. Black bears scratched backs against your young bark. Ohlone passed peacefully on their path to the waters of La Honda Creek. In my lifetime you groaned. Your bark filled with beetles. Woodpeckers drilled, feasted. Needles, whole limbs, you shed your clothes, stood naked. I cut your flesh. You walloped the earth, creating a trench two hundred feet long where you lie. As you fell in your fury you destroyed my tomatoes, smashed the daffodils, snapped a dogwood. Better you crush my garden than my house which did not exist nor any of this town when you first advanced one tender green. I want to believe the sawtooth less cruel than another winter of storms. All good fathers must fall. Your children surround you, waving, blocking the light. My children count rings, hands sticky with sap.
First place, Sycamore & Ivy poetry contest 2016
joe-cottonwood
Written by
Jan 22, 2017
Jan 22, 2017 at 4:15 PM UTC
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