They came in mobs, those deadly thieves!
We spread our roots, our breaths drew in,
And then we bellowed, I and kin:
“Leave here, desist, replant your roots!”
They came for us in shiny boots.
They placed their teeth upon a string,
and showed us to that wicked thing.
They wrapped it round, in their endeavour
to cut us from our roots, to sever
each of us from earthy sphere,
And as we crashed, they cried and cheered!
They stacked us up on deerless sleighs,
And formed with us a foul bouquet,
And as they stole us, engine booming,
I found I was no better than a human.
I was from deep black soil dissected.
Now humans' unearthed state reflected
in my own proud trunk made rootless,
subject now to journey fruitless.
As savaged flesh wept and swelt,
Each jolt and thud was sorely felt
Till we from oily trap alighted,
And heaps of dead and dying sighted.
We might have thought our number small
Until we saw that ghastly haul.
It might have been a minor feud,
an act of impulse, a nasty mood,
but in this vale of broken crowns,
on this necropolitic ground,
at this high reach of Death's grey tide,
was an act of genocide.
And even now, and even yet,
exhausted not was Man's dark threat.
They came in ones and fives and threes.
They drifted up upon the breeze.
But how they differed from rancid stink
was in what they carried: those shards of clink,
that lit their eyes and filled their grip,
and brimmed their dreams and curled their lips.
And of this coin, what was the aim?
Of which foul sport were we the game?
What was the scheme behind our murder?
All was revealed as they began to barter.
And what the price of one arboris,
apart, of course, from its biosis?
Thirty pieces was final toll
to him, the brand new owner of my soul.
With nothing more than mute egress,
my time with kindred deliquesced.
Aye, from my brethren I was split,
And carried then to odorous pit,
shakingly upon their shoulders,
just as the cousin growing colder.
Placed upright by mantelshelf,
in mockery of my rooted self,
now I their furrow did survey
in all its grim and dark decay.
Of all their squalor and unfitness,
was I to be the judge and witness.
And back they looked with eyes agleam,
dashing hopes to dwell unseen.
To me they brought their tawdry garnish,
and I did they begin to furnish,
and when at last they came away,
I stood replete in gaudy lingerie.
And though clothed like courtesan,
my torment only now began,
for now they gulped and gorged and pranced,
frolicked in a state of trance.
I, in the midst of wilding pack,
had turned to aphrodisiac.
Time’s suffrance is ineluctable
yet passage indestructible.
It crept as surely as decay,
until I found I had outstayed
my welcome in that wretched dwelling,
and now my final fate was swelling
in Man's dark heart as they denuded
me of frilly garment, excluded
then from frosty home to street,
my transformation near complete.
Whence had I been sequined guest,
now was forsaken, dispossessed.
And here I am, and here remain,
my human value all but drained.
I lie here butchered in the lane
with others of my green domain.
Who knows what fate may have in store?
And yet I sense there's little more.
My shadow's long; my noose at morning.
There's only time to share this warning.
Should you consort with humankind,
see us, and do not enter blind.
For Man's had many staunch allies
and led each one to her demise.
Oh, oh, oh!
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry, Christmas Tree,
To have thus degraded thee.
I find your beauty, gaudy, bright,
A joyous lifting festive sight.
I must embrace solution drastic,
Next year I shall have ugly plastic.
An excellent response. However, to offer an alternative perspective, the poem may not actually be about Christmas trees!
DeleteBut about how mankind spoils and kills all that it touches?
DeleteYes, human impact in general and, to the extent that the tree is anthropomorphised, perhaps the way humans treat one another too.
DeleteThis poem makes me think of multiple things at once:
ReplyDelete- The tradition of cutting down trees to use during Christmas. A tradition that i always found, at best, strange.
- The fact that in Argentina we simply use plastic trees xD
And more importantly:
- The way the Xmas tree can represent the whole environment, which gets worse and worse each day due to man's actions.
I loved it!
I'm glad! I like the idea that the tree represents more than just itself, and I'm glad that came across. However, I wonder if plastic trees are much better.
DeleteExcellent piece Kester.. 👏
ReplyDeleteI appreciate it, thank you!
Delete