
Nights
There are nights
when the trees
seem to whisper
your name,
cautioning you
against the wind’s
knife edge.
“What have I done,”
you ask,
“to merit this?”
The soft fall
of burnt brown leaves
weeps over
your woodland grave.
You will walk
these woods
no more, save
on a frosty night
when deer shiver
beneath naked trees
and the moonbeam’s
icy blade.
Comment:
Poems arrive, as silent as the deer that troop through my garden. Some times they hurry past, and catch them if you can. Sometimes, they stay, wait, nibble at an overhanging branch. Just when you think you can reach out and grasp them, they sense the bark of a dog, the sigh of the wind through leafless trees. You blink, and they have gone.
Was your camera ready? Was your note book open, your pen in your hand? Or did they flit away like dreams in the morning when the sun comes into the bedroom and sparks diamond fires from the lashes that guard your eyes?