Now the early mornings are warm and the grass is soft again.
I wear every leaf on the garden paths, woven together with all the others, for garden slippers.
No pair is perfectly matched. All are left behind with every step.
Earthy dew zaps my feet, washes them, startles the heart and composes a hymn.
*****
The sun rose a long distance east of the pear tree,
warming the Earth and waking up the air
which took flight from the still night
like invisible wings, gliding out of sync on unmapped airways.
The breathless sighs blew soft as fluttering eyelashes on sleepy schoolchildren
who wished to be out of doors on this day
out of classrooms.
The kingdom should set children free on such a day as today
when invisible magic carpets will steal them away
when the petals of the pear tree blossoms will fly into their ears and onto their tongues
and leave stars on the tree.
When the children will run
or gather into tribes around the lilacs
and look down to find ants,
look up to the bee, with pollen stored into travel packs on minuscule legs.
When everywhere, the breeze says nothing
and the robin stands next to my cup of tea showing off a beak filled with nest-building materials
all foraged from Earth.
It is all fiction when we talk about it in the classroom.
*****
Remember when you were unafraid of your dreams!
Remember climbing into the tree and watching how the twig grew a flower
and the flower grew a fruit
and the bee made honey!
Remember spending all day building nests, using your mouths
how you stood at the edge of the nest
and I watched you fall
my tears concealed underneath the stars on the pear tree, ripe.
And when you returned, eyes bigger, bellies full,
brains buzzing, chirping, and brave–
I fed you pear bread, with a dollop of pear jam.
All the things I made,
from the tree I grew,
because your father was once a little boy who lived on Pear Tree Drive
And after I loved him,
I had you.





