Three trees

short poetry, colonialism, family, history trees death religion separation, love

A brook runs through my Grandmas farm,
That used to carry gold.

My Grandpa
-Benjamin-

Did not yield the land,
To the British, who wanted it dammed.

In 1968, they took him in,
To have his appendix removed,
And Grandma never remarried.

My Aunt Alice,
Was a witch.

She flew in on broomsticks
We never saw,

But heard in the barn,
Where she parked.

She brought foreign sweets that didn’t
Crack our lips,
And told us naughty jokes.

-Oh Pope the Bastard,
Please pass the Custard!-
We’d squeal and never tell,

And feel all grown up and,
Conspiratorial.

Grandma says she died running with
The wrong pack,

That she was knocked from the sky,
By a cross.

Later we learned,
It was a broken heart that did it,

That Grandma wouldn’t accept a,
Jewish man in the house,

So she killed herself.

Mary was dead when we got here,
Her tree is the prettiest.

It’s a large yellow poplar that,
Trembles in the slightest breeze,

She was a violinist,
A frail, little thing, who

Is fading away,
In family photographs.

Irridescent sparrows trill,
Beautiful harmonies,
From skinny branches,

Shielded by the most delicate,
Drooping fronds.

You see, my Grandmother has three beautiful trees,
Growing in her garden,

One for Benjamin, one for Alice, one for Mary.

My grandmother used to sit under these trees.
They’re feeding off the bones she says.

photo – personal

evocative short poetry – words move

28 thoughts on “Three trees

  1. ‘Three Trees’ is a lovely tribute to a family, Kolembo. I sense a novel packed within the lines – waiting for release.
    Thank you for your comments on ‘That Football match’.
    I’ll visit again.
    Go well.

  2. I read through many of your poems on the advice of a friend who recommended your site. I’m blown the fuck away; you have a firm grasp of the subtly ironic manner with which this world lurches forward & back. Something in the way you redefine ideas within an organic context speaks to me of places I’ve never been and lives I’ve never has the pleasure to meet. ’3 Trees’ specifically seemed to pull all of the issues you write about together into a coherent picture of (to borrow a phrase from JB) ‘Living & Dying in 3/4 Time.’ Bountiful expression of humanity that left me gasping for air. Can’t wait to continue reading through your poetry but just felt like I had to leave a comment to pass along a hearty thanks for sharing your words. Let the brilliance continue; this world is too ugly without a little Value-Added Beauty to spruce up the iridescent sheen of an oil soaked planet. Take it easy,

    crb.

  3. hpicasso says:

    you have a beautiful voice man…just beautiful…if I had to get bad news, I would Love to hear it from you

    Peace, hp

  4. Just genius! Nice one. K

  5. lolamouse says:

    This was a haunting and sad poem of family love and loss. You wove together your story beautifully.

  6. dunstancarter says:

    Wow – what a tale you weave! Great poem, Kolembo

  7. fiveloaf says:

    love how you weave it kolembo! thank you for sharing this! my late potluck haha- http://fiveloaf.wordpress.com/2011/03/08/nectar-from-heaven/

  8. Amazing…but I’ve come to expect that when I visit your blog.

  9. Beautiful. Dark. Engaging. Thanks for your recent comments, K. I really appreciate all the visits.

  10. Ray Brown says:

    I appreciated these lines:

    “Her tree is the prettiest.

    It’s a large yellow poplar that,
    Trembles in the slightest breeze,

    And irridescent sparrows trill beautiful
    Harmonies from,
    Skinny branches,

    Sheilded by the most delicate,
    Drooping fronds,”

  11. Jingle says:

    lovely portrayal of your family members.
    smiles.

    keep the confidence in..
    A++

  12. honeyhaiku says:

    Wonderfully told. Mastery of your lineage.

  13. Leo says:

    a storyteller in verse.. I enjoyed it, how you worked your story around the trees! wonderful..

    Leo @ I Rhyme Without Reason

  14. redroom10 says:

    Wonderful. As always :)

  15. jlscott13 says:

    You’re such a great storyteller. I really enjoy you’re writing, especially this one. It makes me thinking of how I’m working on a family “tree”, definitely takes that to another level. Great job ;)

  16. Brendan says:

    What a masterful, magical, strange and wonderful tale. I agree that this is one my favrorites by you. Great job. — Brendan

  17. family as heroes!!! I like…I don’t believe in heroes and mentors hmmm, well let’s just say we are all humans. I love what you did with the theme. Happy Monday!

  18. You are a masterful storyteller. The imagery, detail and roller coaster emotions your words evoke are a thrilling joyride. Thank you.

  19. Kavita says:

    You have given new perspective to the term “family tree” here!! Beautifully woven story, my friend…
    Certain lines really gave me the chills…
    And the end was KILLER!!! Simply brilliant!

  20. Jessica says:

    I like the story telling here!
    ‘feeding off the bones’ is a chilling line!

    http://jessicasjapes.wordpress.com/2011/03/07/sweet-pleasure/

  21. Magical story in your words! Thanks for sharing this with us!

  22. dhaami says:

    you did it again! In a few beautiful words .. I feel like I know all three of them… Fabulously written!

  23. lesser angel says:

    I love –

    “Iridescent sparrows trill
    Beautiful harmonies
    From skinny branches,

    Shielded by the most delicate,
    Drooping fronds.”

    Its such a lovely touch for Mary.

  24. kshawnedgar says:

    “feeding off the bones”, beautiful and thrilling. Imagine three trees, roots breaking ground and entangling three coffins, piercing their old wood, and soaking up the power of three people’s still thriving bones. Love this!

  25. AShley says:

    Heart-wrenching.

  26. You dug deep for that one Kenny! It is beautiful and it rips my heart out at the same time! Exquisite.

  27. lightdance says:

    Masterfully told!

  28. danroberson says:

    This is my favorite poem so far. You tied it together, weaving the stories around the three trees, and leaving grandmother, as the caretaker and dream weaver. Very nicely done.

hello! :-)

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s