Hawk Tree
The hawk rides the day’s last comet
and perches high aloft a
storm pale limb.
He watches. Waits. His oracle eye
cast like a copper coin
into the bracken well of time.
Wind rows the leaves
and the hawk sees from his bleached galley
mighty boughs spread like
cirrus clouds
where red deer gather dew in cupped horns
to sow a river to the gods—
and then, farther still, beyond
where the earth gears
and grates in the smithy of its axis, roots
trellis into a bone dance of mountains
spitting flowered flames.
Ash falls
toward fossil forests
and patterns the ground
with crocodilian ferns.
The hawk sees tectonic
plates grind
like the chain mail spine of a stegosaurus,
and shallow seaways
crater red as orchids
where the ear stones of ancient fish quake
with memories layered like
Saturn’s icy bands
and in the dilated
blink of the hawk’s eye, they reel—
and circle like carved wooden spintops
into future centuries, when
island galaxies
are colonized in fingerprints of light
and guild ships burn off the spiral arm.
With telescopic sight he reads the tidal features
of a collision course
and glimpses rings of dust
in the heart of
Andromeda.
We tried to tie the falconer’s knot
only to have the earth
slip through the loop
like an acorn
falling from a tree.
Strawberry
You are worshipped and adored
and perhaps you are too perfect.
The finch fell in love with you. The robin and the squirrel, too.
Stonemasons carved your shape into the pillars of cathedrals.
The sun’s watchful eye makes you blush.
Your leggy stalks
wade the rows like redshanks in a
flood meadow,
and hold a solstice crown of serrated leaves
as we kneel before you
gathering the last of the day’s picking.
Your reign is short
and already you are growing old.
Summer’s feral children ring their mouths
with scarlet-speckled fruit and find their tongues
tangy with lesions and velvety-grey mould.
Did you banish your daughters from home
run them to a reedy patch skirted with barbed wire,
or did they run away from you, flushed
and fearful of the way you clung to their beauty.
You were once loved and adored
the perfect berry of the heavens,
now your heart-shaped mouth hounds the fields
and snaps the necks of rabbits,
like our claret-stained fingers
when we pull and twist you from the stem.
The Red Squirrel
A rodent eye
ringed with white, a bushy tale
coppered like
dried blood, he is territorial
the red squirrel,
and
nimble-footed as he scurries a wooden balustrade.
The tree is a
staircase he knows too well.
Up and down he
carries messages
between the
worlds—
from the
steepled rafter where the eagle perches
to the cellarage
where the dragon gnaws
on coiled roots.
But he is
mischief-mouthed
the red squirrel,
and fond of
rumours and rot.
He meddles,
stirs feuds
and with each
branched step
the messages
turn more malign.
His chatter is
merciless, a drill tooth
drawing dark
resin from the tree’s shingled coat.
The order of
insects is blighted,
fairy-struck
before the earthquake
of a rat-toothed
tusk.
The tree
trembles and knots.
The birds call
him shadow tail
because a red
shadow is all they see when
he thieves eggs
and nestlings
and bores
coffins to cache his tithe.
But he doesn’t
pay that tithe
to the eagle
above or the dragon below.
The grace-giving
is to himself,
the red squirrel
and himself
alone.
With each egg
and nestling
he casts his
horoscope,
and razes his
home with gossip and rot
rather than host
the craven-winged interlopers.
Witch’s Ladder
I should have realized something was rotten
when the oracle I invited to
tea
failed to see that the almond cake
baking in the oven was
already burning
or maybe I failed to see
that an oracle is a
prehistoric beast
dragged down by its own weight,
and that predation
marks
are signs of eternal recurrence.
When I’m having tea with the oracle
I notice that my neighbour,
Bill,
is on a ladder cleaning his gutters.
At the first sign of neglect nature stakes its claim.
The valley darkens with
fallen trees. Stone walls
collapse like a quarry hall of dinosaur bones,
and then the route home
becomes unrecognizable
lost in a filigree of bur and moss,
and secretive little black
birds slip and caw
among layers of foliage cobwebbed tight as
scars.
Bill climbs the ladder
and takes the cords of
braided hair
and opens each knot like a cabinet of curiosities:
coral, feather, fossil,
pocket mirror
locket, specimens of fish and birds—
the disparate contents like
a constellation.
It’s a vision
distracted only by a summer
dragonfly
serving its bulbous green eyes
into my windowpane, again
and
again.
Damon Hubbs lives in a small town in Massachusetts. He graduated with a BA in World Literature from Bradford College. When not writing, Damon can be found growing microgreens, divining the flight pattern of birds, and ambling the forests and beaches of New England with his wife and two children. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Book of Matches, The Chamber Magazine, Young Ravens Literary Review, and Eunoia Review.
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