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Epiphany

by @arliced

1. A star-shaped patch of snow, achingly white, rests against the base of the little white pine, wrapped in glittering golds and reds, gifts for the Christ Child. No claw or paw or beak or wing has touched the snow. Only a hidden pitch of grass pushes it skyward. It shirks its shrinkage north of the pine. It will not winnow until the bright star burns. *I pass the snow and think of nothing*. 2. Lightning split the hide of the 80-year-old oak that shaded our little tan house each summer. Its bark ripped apart like wallpaper, life leeching out of its crooked limbs in sap-soaked streams of sorrow, making room for the little white pine to thrive in the dead of winter. *Nature is not our friend*. 3. The pine prays to preserve some piece of the oak I used to love. Its needles, like shark’s teeth, fend off friend and foe alike, granting it the right to grow wherever it likes, even here, at the foot of giants. Dead, the pin oak loans its beauty to no one, boasts only of its hard, straight wood, an abiding abode for birds and squirrels and barking boys. I climb to its top each Christmas, straining toward the Epiphany star. *The tree sways, and I think of nothing*.  4. The burgeoning pine pines for such power. You cannot cut it without exposing its darkened knots, like aging spots on my hands and face. It rises bright with anemone-like cones dappled on its coat of single color:       evergreen,       ever young.       Ever gone, my pilgrim oak. I stretch toward the star of Bethlehem, dreaming my way to Heaven, saying No to the punishing star of snow below. Hanging high above the Earth, I sense the Christ Child in my branches. *Wet, wild grasses brush His cradle, push me skyward, His star my home*.
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Written by
arliced
M / Kansas
For You?
Written by
arliced
M / Kansas
Published
Aug 20, 2018
Time
4m
Notes

Written on a rare Epiphany Sunday.

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