Thursday, February 24, 2011

Dying Leaves



The dying leaves
                             lie in dense drifts
across the fenced space behind my home.

Summer’s last refuge, the green grass
pokes out from beneath the decomposition.
Soon, the grass blades will die like the leaves,
and winter’s glacial coat will cover
the hibernating ground.

The snow always reminds me of innocence,
while the half-alive leaves, shed from guilty trees,
is evidence of too much living.

Falling and wind-blown, the leaves mark time.

Each one is a minute or an hour or perhaps a day,
counting down the moments towards death.

In Autumn, the leaves seem a waste.
Clumped together in piles or scattered about
by the wind, they paint a blurry image
of some vague, yet regrettable loss.

Through my window, I see the naked
and unabashed trees flaunt their bare limbs.  

Heavy with dying, their leaves
lie listless upon the earth.

I am the shed leaves—scattered evidence
of the tree’s former living. Each fragment shapes
my dying and the regret of not living.

And I am the greedy, abandoned tree,
counting its losses as necessary,
relinquishing its dressing,
one stitch at a time,
in single, shredded pieces.

I do not die then.

Instead, I shed my own living
to withstand the dormant winter;
so in springtime I might dig my roots
deeper into soil and rock and rot,

grow larger,
become fed
by the fertile death
of my leaves.

© Ami Mattison



Flickr photo courtesy of joiseyshowaa


For imperfect prose

9 comments:

  1. Lovely and lyrical. I like very much how you make the seasons your metaphor and work through them as life narrative that ends positively and looking forward.

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  2. Thank you, Maureen. I wrote this at a very dark time in my life when I was looking for some redemption and all I could see was drifts of dead leaves--literally and figuratively. But the trees, which grow back bigger and stronger and fuller each year gave me some sense of the continuum of life and death.

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  3. i shed my living to endure the winter....pow. nice...great descriptive intro flowing intot he personification...dig those roots in...spring is coming...

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  4. Amy your brilliance and talent are inspirational. The English have a saying: "Don't teach your grandmother how to knit," so I won't!!

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  5. Thanks, Brian and Elizabeth!

    Brian, I assume spring is somewhere underneath this foot or so of snow! I'm crossing my fingers it shows sooner rather than later!

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  6. Beautiful thoughts of the circle of life. The last stanza is especially nice. (Thanks for your kind comment on my blog today.)

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  7. I like how you move from being the leaves and then being the tree... these line below are my favourite!
    I am the shed leaves—scattered evidence
    of the tree’s former living. Each fragment shapes
    my dying and the regret of not living.

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  8. so in springtime I might dig my roots
    deeper into soil and rock and rot....

    wow... mattison... i love love love this. the fluidity and whimsy of your words, and the depth too, like the roots of this tree, and i hope to keep reading your works... thank you so much for linking. you are truly gifted.

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  9. mind blowing piece.
    love your style.
    :)

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