An old woman sits alone in a room Counting words as they fall from her mouth Creaking and groaning Falling from her mouth Crackling down like dry leaves
She is dying tree With roots that feed the earth
She wears a cloak around her shoulders Tassels brushing at the floor Capturing dust from all the rooms In which she's sat and spoke before
She is spooky She is powerful Within her darkness and light
Her ample hips covers the ground beneath Wrinkled and fallen flesh Her crossed feet have walked for miles on earth barren and dry And in a garden lush and supple is where she learned to cry,
She is the woman My old woman Who's come for my nightmares To ***** away the part of me that cries when she is scared,
She beckons me into the night With long fingers Wrinkled, knobby, soft, veiny, calloused, And says: 'Child don't be afraid Your time is nigh Trust me for I am your old woman and I lead only where you will go'