Learning to see mosses is more like listening than looking. A cursory glance will not do it. Starting to hear a faraway voice or catch a nuance in the quiet subtext of a conversation requires attentiveness, a filtering of all the noise, to catch the music. Mosses are not elevator music; they are the intertwined threads of a Beethoven quartet.
~Robin Wall Kimmerer
My buddy Joyce sent me a completely delightful package for the Winter Poem Swap, complete with adorable wee animals for my mini garden, a journal, chocolate, and this wonderful poem:
Ode to Moss
by Joyce Ray
Woodlands hold trees and flowers,
critters and mythical folk,
play-fullness, seeds of promise and
you
who carpet Zen gardens,
Scottish moors and even
a childhood storybook where
Belinda searched for a friend.
We say, “A rolling stone gathers no moss,”
yet you, Sphagnum, staunched the bleeding
of WWI soldiers, lined the cradles
of indigenous babies, and
you, Peat, are the reason we have
bog bodies and Scotch.
Better yet,
you sequester carbon while
Africans say, “The people who love me
grow on me like moss,”
like soothing balm to ease the hurt
from rolling through troubled times, so
let me create a garden of still
stones whose only purpose is to grow
moss, and you will invite me in
to gather what I need.
***********
Random Noodling has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Diane!
Love your *mossy* post, Tabatha. The last stanza of the poem says it all!
ReplyDelete"let me create a garden of still stones" perfectly lovely. Well done, and hooray for gifts of poetry.
ReplyDeleteJust beautiful! My heart thrilled to read this poem.
ReplyDeleteI loved the quote first, and then the poem. So rich! Snickered at "You, Peat..."! Just perfect!
ReplyDeleteWow, Joyce did a great job with this mossy celebration! Moss IS calming, isn't it? I love that picture, too. Makes me think of THE HIDDEN LIFE OF TREES. So much gentle mystery in the world nurturing us as we walk across our years.... xo
ReplyDeleteJoyce wrote a beauty of a poem, didn't she. A mossy woods always feels welcoming, like a soft green couch.
ReplyDeleteWow, an ode to moss gathers beauty in so many ways. How lovely to read this, Joyce and Tabatha.
ReplyDeleteLove Joyce's poem -- I have new appreciation for moss now :).
ReplyDeleteTabatha, I'm honored to see my poem gift for you shared here. Thank you for calling forth these words by sharing your wee garden project with me. I love the Winter Poem Swap and other challenges/invitations posed by this community. It's always amazing to me to see what our hearts and minds produce with just a snippet of suggested theme, news or information.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful poem. Just reading makes me feel invited in to gather what I need.
ReplyDeleteThat is a gorgeous poem. It lifted my heart. Grew a little springy green in the cracked parts.
ReplyDeleteI love this poem! I will be looking for moss--and appreciating it even more--on my next hike.
ReplyDeleteI have a moss obsession, so I am enamored with this! A treasure.
ReplyDeleteI love this organic growing post Tabatha! Moss is a favorite of mine. There's a garden room in the Lincoln Park conservatory where I've sketched that has mostly moss in it, all different kinds–it's wonderful!
ReplyDeleteJoyce's poem is a gift that moves in so many directions and then come back home again. And Robin Wall Kimmerer last line is lovely. Thanks for sharing all with us.
What a gift! This poem is a "soothing balm".
ReplyDeleteTerrific poem--so many mossy things to love!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joyce, for slowing us down so we can appreciate moss!
ReplyDeleteI learned so much from Joyce's poem and from your quote,Tabatha. Moss is an apt symbol for the kind of quiet, constant power we might all aspire to in these times.
ReplyDeleteI love that fifth stanza, Tabatha - I shall always remember this poem when I encounter moss next.
ReplyDeleteI love this poem and all the mossy photo and sayings. I am very familiar with moss--its annoyances (turning everything greenish in our wet climate) so it's good to be reminded of moss's benefits. (And it sounds like the winter poem swap was another wonderful success!) Happy Hanukkah - it's past, I know - and all the joys of the season to you and yours, Tabatha!
ReplyDeleteSo good. Elizabeth Gilbert's book The Signature of All Things is about a scientist who studies moss.
ReplyDeleteWonderful mossy musings. I love the intersection of science and wordsmithing, where my heart dwells.
ReplyDelete