Twichell’s Pine

At the monastery,
a moth lit, by firelight,
the first frost. 

Incense burns 
fresh, pine rising through
the hours. 

Summer is thin on the brook.
Emptying the long silence,
long, soft rustling, robes. 

Deer tracks
made of snow. The wind has
dragged over history.

The first night at the monastery,
a moth lit on my sleeve by firelight,
long after the first frost.

A short stick of incense burns
thirty minutes, fresh thread of pine
rising through the old pine of the hours.

Summer is trapped under the thin
glass on the brook, making
the sound of an
emptying bottle.

Before the long silence,
the monks makea long soft rustling,
adjusting their robes.

The deer are safe now. Their tracks
are made of snow. The wind has dragged
its branches over their history.”