(See pic below)
Round and smooth,
Clinging to my mother oak
Amid a grove along the stream.
Later, when the Man came
And cut so many trees
To make his buildings,
I had found a spot
Between some remnant roots
Where I sprouted as a tiny shoot
With just four leaves
Upon a spindly stem.
Rich with humus
From the dwindling woodland,
The soil nurtured me
Until I was a sapling
Tall and straight enough
To shade the deep veranda
Of the foursquare house
He’d built beside the springs.
He spared me, fenced me
From the goats and horses,
Watered me a bit
When rains failed.
My spreading arms
Sheltered his sons at play.
I recall their laughter
Even as they left,
Fodder for the war
So far away. The Man wept
Beside my trunk one night
When he heard their fate.
Years passed;
New people, new sounds,
Wagons, coaches, buggies,
Droves of bawling cattle.
Strange machinery,
First puffing steam,
Then smoke, growled
Along the road.
The empty house burned,
Replaced by pastures,
Other houses, other men,
Women, children.
And I grew old,
Rough-barked, tall, thick,
All the while
The people came and went,
And brought disruption,
Soil ripped open, all
The other oaks destroyed,
The stream defiled,
Cement, asphalt, bricks,
Lines of cars, offices
In rows, a pavement desert
Where my roots hide.
Yet I remain, deep
In memories, long
In patience, living
Where all else died.
Stand beneath my limbs
And look about you;
History is made
Not just of what is gone
But what survives.
©2009 John I. Blair
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