Into The Woods
Into the fading light
the pink curiosity of a summer evening
something known, absolutely; something loved, absolutely
and everything I have yet to see.
The trees, and the way they move and sing
lacy skirts of ivy gilded in a 7 o’clock glow
the waterfall-hush of leaves and the syncopated beats of the woodpecker
thud-thud-thud in my chest and jaw, and I don’t have
a bedtime any longer, so if I wanted I could wait
for the owls to wake up.
Through the peach-stained trunks, the lustrous paint-stroke movements
of a deer, all slender leg and kohl-wrapped eye and in the undergrowth
fast uncanny ruffling, and I won’t ever see what made the
ferns dance.
I wait. In the gentle gold, a figure is forming, and I see
my mother, and outrunning the seasons and the years and the endless cycle of
green and red and brown and bare, there is a younger me
running to meet her where the sun
makes the woods
magic.
Daisy Harris