Tomorrow you'll take me. Sever the ground I live in, Cut the parts I've grown in. Promise to bathe me in moonlight, Yet I have no trust in beams. Tomorrow you'll send me, Net my arms and splinter fingertips- Bruise my pines and watch me blink In the brightness of the headlights Whilst I'm carried through the dark. Tomorrow you'll clothe me, As Samaritans do wounds And I'll feel the liquor burn my bark As you stand me in the pot. Tomorrow I'll watch you as you bring in the boxes, Stack them high against the fireplace And touch me with your eyes. I'll feel the whispers of the skin As I am dressed with gold and silver, Reflecting light as I am known to do When dewdrops lick my skin. Tomorrow you'll crown me, Raise the stars above my head and turn The switch to light my body. Tomorrow you'll leave me, Let me wait for legend's footsteps 'till I feel him underneath me, Laying gifts upon my feet. I'll hear him- soft as cobwebs But the spider nonetheless, For his presence is surprising And the children are his flies. Tomorrow I'll be wakened by the first Pure cries of youth, Sending shivers down the breadth of me And raising hairs along your neck. For now though, I wait here, In the shadow of my fathers as the sun Tips its light towards the frost encrusted lake, So that I may sleep within the winds. As birdsong filters through my pines I close an ear and halt the world. Thinking of the time when I will be with you. Tomorrow. |