Song of
Everything
by Oonah V Joslin
Sapling opened his branches and stretched up towards the light. On the forest floor everything was dark and needle still. He could hear water babbling non-stop.
“What is
that noise, Mother?” he asked the tall spruce who guarded him.
“It’s
Brook, Sapling, dear.”
“What does
it say?”
“It tells
of what it has seen and asks where it is going.”
“Who is it
asking, Mother?”
“It asks
the converging waters and the stony river bed.”
“And they
tell it?”
“They tell
it what they know.”
“What do
they know, Mother?”
Sapling’s
mother sighed in the wind. She wished she had all the answers. “Don’t ask me. I
speak only to the earth, rain and wind.”
***
When
springtime came, birds perched in Sapling’s arms and made nests all around the
forest; and they sang.
“What are
they singing, Mother,” he asked.
“They are
singing love songs and lullabies, dearest,” answered Spruce, “and songs about
lands far away.”
“Do you
know the words, Mother?”
“Alas no,
for I only speak to the wind that carries them.”
***
Sapling
grew taller daily. He could see way into the forest now, to where shafts of
light streaked through the canopy and onto the floor and wild flowers rampaged
in colourful clouds of blossom. He could smell their perfume and hear the bees,
busy with excitement, ruffling petal skirts.
“What do
bees sing about, Mother?”
“They sing
about pollen and honey and love. All the sweetest things in life.”
“And the
flowers?”
“Flowers
don’t sing, Son.”
Sapling
looked at the bright blooms of the forest, and he could see why — flowers were
indeed loud enough, in silence.
***
Down in
the deciduous wood, the first leaves turned to yellow and red. The flowers,
birds and bees were mostly gone. Sapling longed to be as tall as his mother, as
tall as Fir and Pine, as tall as Douglas and Conifer.
***
Snowflakes
crinkled as they settled all around him and he held his branches out stiffly to
catch a few and admire their lace. Even the darkness became light. The moon
played an ever-changing chorus of shadows over the snowflakes and they
reflected harmonies of deep blue and purple until the rosy pink of dawn.
But
Sapling did not like the song the morning brought. He heard men with harsh
voices and a zinging sound cut through the air. It made him quail. “What song
is that, Mother,” he asked.
Spruce
heard the buzz-saw too and the crack of wood. She caught the sweet, sad scent
of freshly cut bark. “That is the song of death, Sapling. Sooner or later all
fall or are cut down.”
“When,
mother?”
“None can
tell.”
They watched
as the handsomest tree in the forest crashed to the ground and was hauled away.
“What
happens when we fall, Mother?”
“Some say
we burn. Others say we go to a beautiful place where all is joy and light,
feasting and songs.”
“Do you
believe that, Mother?”
“I wish it
might be so.”
***
The men
with harsh voices came closer.
“Too small
‘d’you think?”
“Nah, we
can take the little’uns root and all. They fetch a good price.”
They
smeared an X and an R roughly on the barks.
“I wish we
could fly away, like birds,” said Sapling.
“It
wouldn’t help. Even birds must learn that song,” said Spruce.
* * * * *
"Song of Everything" was
first published in Every Day Fiction, http://www.everydayfiction.com/song-of-everything-by-oonah-v-joslin/#comments
Oonah V Joslin is poetry editor at The
Linnet’s Wings. She has won prizes for both poetry and micro-fiction. Her
book Three Pounds of Cells ISBN: 13:
978-1535486491 is available online from Linnet’s Wings Press and you
can see and hear Oonah read in this National Trust video. The first part of her novella A Genie in
a Jam is serialised at Bewildering Stories, along with a large
body of her work (see Bibliography). You can follow Oonah on Facebook or at Parallel Oonahverse https://oovj.wordpress.com/.
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