RIVERWOODS POEMS: SQUAMSCOTT BIRCH

THE SQUAMSCOTT BIRCH

Barrel chested and brawny armed,

The aged birch still stands

Incongruous on the riverbank.

They have fenced it in

With posts and a metal chain

To ward off scrambling kids.

How many years did it take

To put out all those limbs,

One torn off by lightning

Or by wind: the scar remains.

It’s younger than the pines

That sheltered shell diggers,

But did it watch the big-sailed

Gundalows barging bricks?

It could not in its salad days

Arrow skyward slimly straight

But branched and branched again

For what was near at hand.

Hugely ugly, it calls

Out to me.  It haunts my

Memory.  It’s begging to be

Made into a poem.

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