When I forgive the monsters among the trees, my petals will grow dusted pink-- These days, I have become a skeleton made of thorns, An unbloomed rosebush stark against the gentle green. Sometimes I see sunlight beyond the thick-leaf canopy, Splintered by branches and trunks more mighty than I may ever grow, And I recall the sweet and far flowered days, wet with morning dew. The monsters came in summer heat with clouds for tails and roots hard as stone-- They trod rough on my leaves and stole my roses with grinding teeth, And left me naked among oaken giants. Six flooded springs have passed, though every dawn breaks cold, A suffocating haze, thick as if the sky itself fell to weigh me down, How slowly fog burns under the rising sun.