Of Moon and Thorn
The Wolf Moon
comes tonight,
and the Fairy Thorn
feels its fullness.
She has kept
her hawthorn
watch over the wild
almost
two centuries now;
bearing in
her branches
storm and lightening,
sun and rain,
loss and love,
in equal measure,
as does every life.
Another year
she sits right rooted
fenced off
in her quiet vigil
like a hermit in their cell,
always open to the
great mystery of
sky and hill and land,
held in the light of Love’s
own making.
She casts her black branches
like gospels scribed
upon the vellum of the sky,
years in the tree telling
of her slow tale,
illuminated by
her fragile flowering;
the harvest of her falling
fruit by furred
and feathered
is her assurance
of a blessing
on this land,
her veiling the
glint of snow before
the gift of green.
For now though,
bare and brazen
she awaits her tryst
with moon,
and stone,
and stormy sky,
whispering
creaking wisdom
to the old crow who
sits upon her branch
who brings her news
of all this land
we think is ours,
and at this
at least
they laugh
lovingly,
as elders
do, when
watching
the games
of
children.
Inspired by a visit to the Fairy Thorn at Airfield estate in Dublin this time last year.
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