The First Tree.
Posted: Tue Sep 08, 2009 4:30 pm
The First Tree.
Dinanzi a me non fuor cose create
Se non etterne, ed io etterno duro.
Dante.
The tree at the beginning of time was neither a proud oak nor a kowtowing willow; it was a tree before names. The tree was seen by no-one, for it lived long before there were eyes to see.
Though it bent to the wind, it was not forced; for it knew neither wind nor force. Though its leaves were stripped by the flaying hail, in its solitariness it did not judge, for judgement is for the forest.
Still it stands, aeons ago. Our existence does not matter to it. It simply is and will be, long after our great named trees are gone.
But you can dream of the tree at the beginning of time, dream that its stormlit silhouette strikes an unwilled image starker than politics or prejudice, hatred nor somnambulant dreamers can dim, for that tree is the sum of itself.
The tree at the beginning of time was neither a proud oak nor a kowtowing willow. It was freedom, and its fruit is sweeter than we have yet learned to taste.
Dinanzi a me non fuor cose create
Se non etterne, ed io etterno duro.
Dante.
The tree at the beginning of time was neither a proud oak nor a kowtowing willow; it was a tree before names. The tree was seen by no-one, for it lived long before there were eyes to see.
Though it bent to the wind, it was not forced; for it knew neither wind nor force. Though its leaves were stripped by the flaying hail, in its solitariness it did not judge, for judgement is for the forest.
Still it stands, aeons ago. Our existence does not matter to it. It simply is and will be, long after our great named trees are gone.
But you can dream of the tree at the beginning of time, dream that its stormlit silhouette strikes an unwilled image starker than politics or prejudice, hatred nor somnambulant dreamers can dim, for that tree is the sum of itself.
The tree at the beginning of time was neither a proud oak nor a kowtowing willow. It was freedom, and its fruit is sweeter than we have yet learned to taste.