Poem | The Leaves

By | Apr 25, 2024
Arts, Spring 2024
leaves

Communal prayer is a chorus, but more often we pray in solitude and silence. This poem by Rachel Mennies looks to the leaves for signs of resilience and finds them “more alive” for having braved the dark.
Jody Bolz, Poetry Editor

THE LEAVES

Be gracious to me, O God, because I languish;
heal me, O God, because my bones are frightened.

—Psalms, 6:3

The leaves understand

what the sun does to them is
temporary. I understand

the cellular network that moves
them through their lives

if I study it. I touch the limp
ones at dusk, awakening

to them still alive—more alive—
from their time left in the dark.

The leaves understand

what the sun does to them is
temporary. My God, can you

make it so for this body
trapped in the future?

Place the leaf in my mouth
and call it cure, or else sustenance—

let me lie in the dark
and hearten.

Rachel Mennies is the author of two books of poetry, The Naomi Letters (BOA Editions, 2021) and The Glad Hand of God Points Backwards (Texas Tech University Press, 2014), a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award.

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