so my brother spoke the words of the arbutus
so the mother thickened her sauces with the ash tree’s black resin
the female branches made off with the laundry on our lines
the young shoots leapt into our nights
cracked our pavement
The “wanted” poster distributed via winds and tides led to a blackbird
It was he who’d set fire to the forest with a match
He who’d sung Hallelujah mockingly at the old oak tree’s burial
Our careful openings had nothing to do with the mold in the one book we owned
The illiterate mother read its veins
© Vénus Khoury-Ghata. By arrangement with the author. Translation © 2012 by Marilyn Hacker. All rights reserved.