This post contains Amazon affiliate links. If you click through and make a purchase, I will receive a small compensation at no extra cost to you. This helps keep my blog ad-free.

What Trees Dream Of by Danusha Laméris This one thinks, let me be the slender bow of the violin. Another, the body of the instrument, burnished, the color of amber. One imagines life as a narrow boat crossing water, a light mist of salt on the prow. And still another &emdash; planed down to planks, then hammered into shelter toices vibrating through the rafters. We do not notice their pleasure, the slight hum of the banister beneath our palms, The satisfaction of the desk as we tap our pens, impatiently, upon its weathered surface. They have ferried us across rough seas to lands that smelled of cinnamon housed our senators, who pace the creaky floors, debating, carried arrowheads to pierce our enemies. We have boiled their pulp, pressed it into thin, white sheets of paper on which we describe all of the above in great detail. And when we die they hold our empty forms in bare cedar until the moment &emdash; and how they long for this, when we meet again in the blackened soil and they take us back in their embrace, carry us up the length of their bodies into the glittery, trembling movement of the leaves. You can find this poem in The Moons of August.