Metaphysical Trees

by Christopher Buckley

Featured Poem 2007

I still had two friends, but they were trees. —Larry Levis I went out into the woods today, and it made me feel, you know, sort of religious. —William Matthews I'd like to have a eucalyptus, a pale and slender one bouncing its loose thoughts off the blue— and maybe an avocado with boughs like an anaconda, and one expansive sycamore reaching out for everything. Yes, and a jacaranda, its violet shade each June edging the eternal past . . . and a pomegranate, I want a pomegranate with Spanish flame- red blossoms dazzling as all get-out in dim December. While I'm at it, I'll have an acacia, and a few Russian olives— their aqua-marine leaves recalling, of course, the implacable sea. And a podocarpus, those leaves Leonardo invented to dovetail with the aureate cloud of light backing up the renaissance. And all this in a little valley arrived at through mustard weed and fennel, white and lavender blooms of wild radish recalling the loosely affiliated clouds, the preliminary stars . . . . We stepped down from that quantum shine clueless as to how our bodies might be simply pronouns, how we stood for— part and particle—those astral antecedents. Right off, looking up, comparing ourselves to the lustrous night, we complained of our unadorned surroundings; we would have towers, would crawl back up the stellar imbrications despite a prohibited tree and all the knowledge we would assume, despite the gardens of Nebuchadnezzar and Assurbanipal where the dim substance of the soul was elucidated against the incomparable chastity of the sky. And though Socrates tells us that we can learn nothing from trees— only from the moral man— what about steadfastness, fortitude, perseverance, loyalty, tenacity, not to mention modesty, grace, their spiritual arms, and a dozen other abstractions for which men die miserably? Still, we are not that bad off if we can get out one afternoon and find a faithful conifer or two to praise, or can let the lacy shag of a pimiento sort out the sun, or especially if we can recall the arboretum of childhood and keep the camphor trees, the pittosporum hedge in perspective against the vanishing point on the air . . . . But something was kept from us, held over our heads, it seems, ever since— incantations, the chalk and diagrams of constellations blowing by until Latin phrases for all we were sure about in the firmament were inscribed in stone over the cathedral doors and set down darkly in orthodox moveable type, and the world divided, and so many taking refuge for ages in the woods . . . . Nevertheless, coming over the dark plateau, there is our old town spinning alone in light, blister of a moon against midnight, white static of starlight across the desert, the salt coming to the surface, the ice caps evaporating, and it's November in Palm Springs, where I go walking in the morning to uncloud my heart, to keep its tumbling, root-like chemistry clear, to see four wild parrots fly from palm to palm as I pass the convention center, the steamy perfume of stalks and delphiniums rising from the moist beds and I am 7 or 8 again wearing a red bow tie and stiff blue business suit for Easter, the glory of the manifest world arranged in sunlight. Above me, the mimosa and lemon boughs, and no text beyond that— I mean we're protected from the vast void of space by nothing more than air, and when the night calms down to darkness we listen for the planets whirling by and it's only the trees giving us back our breath . . . . I take those wild parrots, brilliant and green as Eden, as a sign from God, admittedly a God largely uninterested, unsure perhaps of what more we could possibly want— magnolia, banyan, yew? Maybe an indifferent sign, indecipherable, inadvertent, but there are at least these four green clues to some happiness beneath the sky . . . . If I can't have trees, then perhaps someday just a few yards of dirt some fennel bushes and nasturtiums— that portion of childhood still volunteering from the roadside, beckoning in the winds of traffic. For the time being I'll take these parrots appropriating the tops of the royal palms as if everything were still ours equally before the sun. Take what you can, you know what God will do— he will let the complaints rise like a little smoke dissolving against the dawn, he will turn away, thinking perhaps of another universe. The oceans will warm and drive the sail fish north, the last log will be rolled out of the Amazon— it will all go to hell in a corporate hand basket as we're tipping the brim of our hat over our eyes, nodding-out on the bench in the blue absolution of shade, beneath the last trees of our forgiveness.