Standing Before the Ruins of a White Birch

A tree that grew beyond its means, three massive wings
on a trunk that couldn’t bear the height, cracked in a storm.
And so it all comes down, branch by branch this morning,
the leaves rustling as they are thrown, the woodcutter
high in his red metal cage, footed like a giant insect on the lawn.
I stand and watch the work, the shredder’s teeth being fed
by another laborer’s bare hands. It is not my house beneath
the birch and yet I claim it as I do the others along my street
that are not surviving – the plum tree with its memories
of purple studded cakes and jams, the thinning
arbor vitae. Summer edges now to its usual close.
A friend says she has celebrated too many birthdays,
long enough, just let them go, no candles, singing.
The winds pick up. Darker, cool, these short evenings.

 
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Ronnie Hess is an essayist and poet who lives in Madison. Her most recent chapbook, Canoeing a River with No Name, was awarded the 2018 WFOP chapbook prize.