GHOST HOUSE, Ghost Town, "The Orchard"

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"The Orchard" by Linda Munson Peth

 

The orchard is a leftover from other times.

 

The trees are bent, gnarled and twisted from years and weather,

Disgraced, deformed,

More like fossils of doubled-up skeletons in high chalk walls,

Than the thralls of spring's capture.

 

They are empty faces in late winter's dim sun.

 

We have come to picnic beneath the branches,

Calculating the odds, the chances,

That our arrival will disturb the peace of this boneyard backyard.

 

The orchard can be reached only by the path

That runs through the cemetery.

 

We have brought blanket and basket, though it is empty,

A ruse to leave Ghost Children at home.

They will not come here, they say,

Until they can run among pealing petal-bells,

Appealing rain-rockets of fairy pinks and whites

And nights of such tender blooming

That their hearts fairly burst in fury of Rapture

At Nature's cause,

Because this is their heart-food.

 

For us, it is enough to view the vision of these prodigious wonders,

Fecund habits of the apples and pears,

From the distance of winter's waiting.

 

In our eyes this miracle has already been and blossomed.

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We have memorized the meaning, the meandering liturgy of every season,

Even the bare one.

 

That prepares us to take our pagan hearts part-way to the commitment of dying.

 

Lying here, already covered in leaving,

We build castles and altars of blood and sacrifice,

A flood of reasons why

The orchard must go on without us,

 

 

And reasons why

We must not actively seek our release but,

Waiting,

Taking our time, like troubles, into our nest,

 

Rest and wait to be called to peace.

 

(March 21, 1988)

"Wheresoever it be, there is a most secret place in the hiddenness which is called the Bird's Nest..."
The Holy Kaballah, A. E. Waite, University Books, New Hyde Park, New York, 1965, p 324

"I  plucked pink blossoms from mine apple trees
And wore them all that evening in my hair:
Then in due season when I went to see
I found no apples there.
 
With dangling basket all along the grass
As I had come I went the self-same track:
My neighbors mocked me while they saw me pass
So empty-handed back..."
 
by Christina Rosetti

The one who is residing alone in the forest...in the midst of an orchard...!
The Bible