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Thursday Poem - The Wishing Tree
I stand neither in the
wilderness
nor fairyland
but in the fold
of a green hill
the
tilt from one parish
into another.
To look at me
through a smirr of
rain
is to taste the iron
in your own blood
because I
hoard
the common currency
of longing: each wish
each secret
assignation.
My limbs lift, scabbed
with greenish coins
I draw
into my slow wood
fleur-de-lys, the enthroned Brittania.
Behind me,
the land
reaches toward the Atlantic.
And though I’m
poisoned
choking on the small change
of human hope,
daily beaten
into me
look: I am still alive—
in fact, in bud.
Kathleen Jamie
(The Wishing Tree from Waterlight)
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