Tag: Roots

  • Reaching


    I crouch where the sandstone breaks
    into shallow shelves
    the color of old bone,
    one knee in dust,
    the other
    on loose grain
    that slides downhill
    with every shift of my weight.

    The rock is so warm
    I imagine an ancient woman
    setting a kettle here and
    boiling water for tea.

    Emerging from the crevice—

    yellow.

    I admire the Painter
    through the painted
    and wonder at the Breath
    and the breath
    it takes to stay,
    in this place,

    alive.

    Four open cups
    lifting from a seam
    no wider
    than the edge of my thumb,
    petals folded back
    shamelessly
    in the morning light.

    I lean so close
    I can smell the yellow.
    Or is that the bone?
    I've never smelled either
    so it's hard to say.

    My hair falls forward
    and brushes the soil,
    one strand catching
    on a blade of green—
    I feel like an intruder,

    slowly,
    hooking it behind my ear,
    then lower my face again—
    this time with more care—
    close enough
    to see grains of pollen
    caught in the folds,
    gold dust gathered
    at the center.

    Treasure
    left out in the open.

    A bee was here.

    Maybe an hour ago.
    Maybe it's only been ten seconds.

    How long do bees stay gone?
    Quickly,

    I peer below the bloom.
    Silver leaves spiral outward
    in every direction,
    coated in tiny hairs
    that catch dust,
    light,
    and whatever the wind
    decides to leave behind.

    I run one finger
    along the stem—

    green at first,
    then red,
    then pale
    where the shadow begins
    and sunlight
    never quite
    made the turn.

    I guess there are things
    even the sun never sees.

    The stem narrows,
    twists once,
    then disappears
    into a seam
    too thin
    for my fingernail.

    Still—
    there it goes.

    Down through lime,
    through grit,
    through powdered shell,
    through pockets of black soil
    pressed deep
    between layers of stone
    older than language.

    Roots no thicker
    than thread
    find water
    that probably does not splash.

    I sit back
    on my heels,
    dust coating my jeans,
    my hand still warm
    from the rock,
    and watch
    one yellow cup

    tilt upward
    another fraction
    toward the sun.

    —Iris Lennox