The Almond Tree Song
Where Words Go
by Becky Dennison Sakellariou
ATHENS Greece—(Weekly Hubris)—2/6/12—“Driving along once on some country road in Greece, I thought about how I would really like my death to be. And so the poem came . . . .”
The Almond Tree Song
When I know that I am to die,
I will ask you
to lay me down beneath the almond tree
where I will drink translucent blossoms
and dress my hair in sheaves of gold anemones.
I will ask you
to carry me to the flower beds
where I will sink my fingers
into cracked winter roots,
breathe soft rotting pomegranates.
I will look once more at the mountain,
taste open sky, hear
a black bird’s high song.
I will ask you then
to shroud my body with blankets of sage,
sprinkle it with sweet honeysuckle,
slip me straight
into the dark ground,
no coffin walls to separate my skin
from the ancient hillside.
You will tuck me into my bed
as a mother would,
smoothing earth
around my thighs, my hips,
the curve of my belly,
so that those who come to say farewell
will never have to know
that I have slipped away
into the nearby field of pale lilies,
singing a fresh song.
Photo: Zakynthos, by David Nutting
4 Comments
Anita Sullivan
Thanks so much, Becky, I can’t think of a more perfect way to go into death. I imagine this poem would sound beautiful in Greek, with all those flower and bird words that language does so well!
diana
You make dying sound so desirable. As for that photo, we should use it as PR for Greece. xoxd
Anita Eveson-Peck
Lovely poem, Becky! I remember talking to the Maltese sexton of the British cemetery on Corfu many years ago about being buried in a shroud, but I never made enquiries as to whether this was possible!
Jill Yakas
Beautiful!