by Rachael Clyne
Vulture chorus circles in a hot blue slab of sky, cicadas buzz and clang of goat bells - a recent invention to one who was here before iron before bronze. How do you approach such presence? Do you curtsey do you pray? Soft hiss of sprinkle hose eases aching roots, sun hammers its rhythm as thyme and sage perfume the mountain scrub. What do you say to a tree that bore fruit even as Abraham mouldered in his tomb, before Minoans appeared on the scene? Her silver leaves gleamed triumph before Olympic wreaths were won. No past life memories just this one unending groove. Her craggy girth enfolds boulders with serpentine grace. Canyon cracks and gnarled giants underpin her vast canopy. Caress her, then nestle into her weighty arms and listen. “How can I explain the brevity of aeons? This scaly body now settled into ossification, still breathes leaves and fruit but I’m long gone into the… allthisnow…. Mountainsky… sunbirdcry no difference, no separation no thingness now.” “Te kanis progiagia - How goes it with you great-grandmother?” “Kala poli kalaaaaa - Good very gooood!” ©Rachael Clyne
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