Ellen Maas is a voice in and for the wilderness. She is a member of Somerville’s Bagel Bards, and is well-known for her ecological activism in our community.
Death of A Forest
Sleep fails as my brain begs the blade to stop,
continues deafening into heartwood,
slicing cortex winter coat that covered me from freeze
Merciless saw
cuts through my cambrian layers of evolution
that healed diseased wounds,
carried water to my thirsty branches.
Killers sever my silver maple veins.
I bleed sap and resin with resignation,
Steadfast sapwood system of vascular circuitry
flowed constant, leaf nutrients in transport
finger limbs to roots,
sun permeates the forest, brilliant nurturer for eons.
None discoverd my synthesis secret
carried through from molecular creation
by magical mother.
The grinding saw penetrates ploem neath
protective green layers
shielded me from harm, once,
fueled a vascular system
of sugar food, I make
Miracle sap layer
stood me upright for a 100 years.
My corps nourished farms, animals, bird homes,
scattering verdant morsels for every season.
.
Carbon sequester is non-stop microbial work.
Long roots stem erosion, flood waters by
great earth-tree symbiosis-
flows through my soil via delicate hair,
far up to crown for secret ritual.
I respire for life all around.
Dancing daily, will
touch a blue cosmos
to live beyond millennium and all brutality
Woodland kin, we suspected nothing wrong.
“Tree language”, you said,
“Is harmony with community –beyond which,
we silver maples cannot go.”
I honor the oath.
Killer revs a steel arm again,
severing my pith center. Next,
wrenching,torn trunks collapse by hundreds,
reeling, canopy pounds the ground, breaks,
broken bones like lightning crack,
roots ripped away- grubbed deep into
screaming biotic earth.
We fell in great numbers that October day,
choked nature spirits
buried deep,
final dishonor.
Without emerald countenance,
all barren,
no natural weapons left to stymie the flood of greed-
predation flowing in my fair city
among the refuse of human decay,
drifting apart from our life source.
Cry shame as loss covers my earth.
For generations to come must find this tree world
to hang any planet dream.
Today Solstice
light begins in north hemisphere,
glowing nature’s inextinguishable memory of dead silver maples.
— Ellen Mass
______________________________________
To have your work considered for the LYRICAL send it to:
dougholder@post.harvard.edu
,
Reader Comments