There is something about palm trees but I’m not sure what.
Something in the way palm trees look, how they may grow,
the shapes to which they bend; seemingly innate versatility
that all palm trees have; some hunger to survive and adapt,
to always thrive, as so often they do, provided right climate.
I’ve seen palm trees that survived hurricanes; of which they
must grow bended parallel, stretching across their beaches,
hovering barely above the sand and seashells beneath them.
I’ve seen palm trees appear from nowhere; sprouting out of
tiny cracks in pavement on busy streets in large, dirty cities.
I’ve seen palm trees about half a century tall and smothered
entirely in ferns, flowers, mosses and vines and still thriving
despite the parasites that clothe them by every inch of flesh.
And I also like the sounds they make on windy nights; often
shrilling like graty whistles, or else pouring constant, steady
and almost exactly like rain sticks–wood, wind, symphonies.
And all of that is great, of course–especially jazzed up, as is.
But there is something left about palm trees I cannot realize.
Perhaps as the more I see them, I’ll forget to figure that out.
All I know, as of yet is that, it’s symbolic. Subjective. Solace.
you got mr with the opening ‘there is something about a palm tree but I’m not sure what.’
Cool, thanks for pointing this out, I like to know that.
I also like the sounds they make on windy nights; often
shrilling like graty whistles, or else pouring constant, steady
and almost exactly (these lines go beyond the visual into the music of the trees. you turn them into something to love)
thank you so much, I’m flattered. very constructive observation.