HABITAT
Trees and Power Lines
Aurora Ryder
I start as something small,
no more than a seed.
Thrown against the dirt, yes,
but king amongst the weeds.
I send my roots out searching,
soldiers on the hunt:
they raze the ground around them
with weapons bold and blunt.
We grow so slow together,
my vassal weeds and I.
We reach our aching limbs out,
toward the ever-hidden sky.
And when we break the surface,
I sit alone and stare
at the towering pines above us
with their lords and legionnaires.
I will stand among them.
Above them, even so.
I turn my eye to ready troops,
and bellow to them: “grow!”
I cast my roots out farther,
we toil, pillage, steal;
anything to be stronger,
to make my kingdom real.
We create a mighty nation—
what a powerful thing am I!
I lord above the weeds and dirt,
king of all but sky.
I turn my hungry gaze to them,
those patronizing pines!
There they stand beneath me,
afraid to cross my lines.
But in my glory, wonder,
and triumphant bouts of praise,
I do not hear the thunder,
I do not feel their gaze.
I look amongst the leaves then,
and see my fool mistake.
I have crossed the lines
no king should ever break.
I see the enemy approach,
his weapon firm in hand.
He cuts my crown and kingdom,
he carves off half my land.
It does not hurt exactly,
for I do not feel pain.
But something in me quivers,
and withers all the same.
I am not a titan.
I’m barely even strong.
Today my hopes have fallen,
and all my dreams are gone.