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A Tree Telling of Orpheus

White dawn. Stillness.When the rippling began

I took it for sea-wind, coming to our valley with rumors

of salt, of treeless horizons. But the white fog

didn't stir; the leaves of my brothers remained outstretched,

unmoving.

Yet the rippling drew nearer – and then

my own outermost branches began to tingle, almost as if

fire had been lit below them, too close, and their twig-tips

were drying and curling.

Yet I was not afraid, only

deeply alert.

I was the first to see him, for I grew

out on the pasture slope, beyond the forest.

He was a man, it seemed: the two

moving stems, the short trunk, the two

arm-branches, flexible, each with five leafless

twigs at their ends,

and the head that's crowned by brown or golden grass,

bearing a face not like the beaked face of a bird,

more like a flower's.

He carried a burden made of

some cut branch bent while it was green,

strands of a vine tight-stretched across it. From this,

when he touched it, and from his voice

which unlike the wind's voice had no need of our

leaves and branches to complete its sound,

came the ripple.

But it was now no longer a ripple (he had come near and

stopped in my first shadow) it was a wave that bathed me

as if rain

rose from below and around me

instead of falling.

And what I felt was no longer a dry tingling:

I seemed to be singing as he sang, I seemed to know

what the lark knows; all my sap

was mounting towards the sun that by now

had risen, the mist was rising, the grass

was drying, yet my roots felt music moisten them

deep under earth.

 

He came still closer, leaned on my trunk:

the bark thrilled like a leaf still-folded.

Music! There was no twig of me not

trembling with joy and fear.

 

Then as he sang

it was no longer sounds only that made the music:

he spoke, and as no tree listens I listened, and language

came into my roots

out of the earth,

into my bark

out of the air,

into the pores of my greenest shoots

gently as dew

and there was no word he sang but I knew its meaning.

He told me of journeys,

of where sun and moon go while we stand in dark,

of an earth-journey he dreamed he would take some day

deeper than roots ...

He told of the dreams of man, wars, passions, griefs,

and I, a tree, understood words – ah, it seemed

my thick bark would split like a sapling's that

grew too fast in the spring

when a late frost wounds it.

 

Fire he sang,

that trees fear, and I, a tree, rejoiced in its flames.

New buds broke forth from me though it was full summer.

As though his lyre (now I knew its name)

were both frost and fire, its chords flamed

up to the crown of me.

I was seed again.

I was fern in the swamp.

I was coal.

d
Written by
Denise Levertov
1923-1997 / English
Lines·Words
71·512
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