How to Grow a Husband Tree
by Lizzy Straus
Forget for a moment the bone that figures the velvet wheel
of a swan’s neck, a horse’s. Remind yourself milk is not a gift.
Choose a tonsured wing of yard, an expanse of colored clay
bared by flocks of hooves and teeth at graze. Kneel, as a cobbler
at a woman’s heel, your trowel her endless ankle in your hands.
Allow yourself to desire the ankle. Imagine it fetlocked, articulate
joint haired so white, so smooth, its gleams might embarrass
monks, make them draw their habits tight. Begin to dig with fury.
The dirt should really fly. If you’ve forgotten seeds, prepare
to be the root yourself. If you’ve remembered seeds, prepare
to be the root yourself. Bury yourself standing, all patience.
For How to Grow a Wife Tree see Edible Plants and Poisons.
Photo via cayusa/flickr.
Lizzy Straus is an MFA student at Columbia University. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.