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The stately tree falls To the woodcutter’s axe And all nature mourns. From death comes new life. A perfect shape emerges From the plain, gnarled wood. In his skilful hands The carpenter produces A thing of beauty. But all things must pass. Crushed wood re-born as paper. Metamorphosis. The woodcutter dies And rests in the tree re-made. Seeking forgiveness? He enters the earth. The soft forest floor opens And bids him welcome. An oak marks his place. Its roots at one with his bones. The slow turn of life. And beneath the soil His decomposing body Gives the young tree life.
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Aug 11, 2020
Aug 11, 2020 at 2:19 PM UTC
Recycled
The stately tree falls To the woodcutter’s axe And all nature mourns. From death comes new life. A perfect shape emerges From the plain, gnarled wood. In his skilful hands The carpenter produces A thing of beauty. But all things must pass. Crushed wood re-born as paper. Metamorphosis. The woodcutter dies And rests in the tree re-made. Seeking forgiveness? He enters the earth. The soft forest floor opens And bids him welcome. An oak marks his place. Its roots at one with his bones. The slow turn of life. And beneath the soil His decomposing body Gives the young tree life.
From "Learning to Fly" Recycled © Bill Adair 2015
bill-adair
Written by
M/Stirling, UK
Aug 11, 2020
Aug 11, 2020 at 2:19 PM UTC
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