The Oaks’ Graveyard.
The
oaks are dead.
Straying
from the road,
I stumbled
on their secret graveyard,
enclosed
within a stand of living trees
where
their remains now rest –
eighteen
in all and once of mighty size,
but now
just severed and uprooted stumps,
hidden
from the common sight within a roadside copse.
This stand
of trees was once a greater wood,
where,
no doubt, oaks grew strong and tall.
(Not
far away, the last of these still lives –
its
massive, hollow shell
now standing
like a spectre
beside
the old lane’s edge.)
I’ve
passed here many times before
but never
guessed that in this shady place
these precious
relics,
each
like a wooden Ozymandias, lay:
cut
down, uprooted, left to rot,
and overshadowed
by tall-growing ash and birch.
Some upright,
others on their sides,
each
forms its own memorial
but all
without a name or date recording their demise.
And
overhead, the reverend rooks
in
well-worn Sunday black
preach
from sky-roofed pulpits,
chanting
never-ending funeral rites
or delivering
grim sermons
on death’s
inevitable grip,
while a
woodpecker
is
hammering in coffin nails.
Across
the sky, a red kite haunts the fields,
uttering
its strident, plaintive cries,
not mithering
for the oaks
but in
mocking tones bemoaning
the
death inflicted
by its own
beak and claws.
4 comments:
Lovely words and very atmospheric photographs....again!
I just read that you're a folk musician - I play melodeon and do a bit of singing (loud, finger-in-the-ear stuff).
Could you email me at: johnjocys at hotmail dot com so I can invite you to my blog, I've had to make my blog 'Private' for a while - it's been the target of a troll of late.
Cheers
John
Yes I am, John. I don't play as much as I used to but I'd like to join your blog. I'll email you.
very atmospheric, and although the oaks are dead, if they're left there they'll be home to lots of invertebrates....
That's true - plenty of life in the old trees.
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