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I can’t hear the barista

over the coffee machine.

 
 

Spoons slam, steam rises.

I catch the eye of a man

 
 

sitting in the corner

of the cafe reading alone

 
 

about trees which is, incidentally,

all I can think about

 
 

since returning.

Last week I sat alone

 
 

on a stump, deep in Zelandia forest

with sun-syrupped Kauri trees

 
 

and brazen Tui birds with white tufts

and yellow and black beaks.

 
 

They landed by my feet, blaring so loudly

I had to turn off my hearing aids.

 
 

When all sound disappeared, I was tuned

into a silence that was not an absence.

 

As I switched sound on again,

silence collapsed.

 
 

The forest spat all the birds back,

and I was jealous—

 
 

the earthy Kauri trees, their endless

brown and green trunks of sturdiness.

 
 

I wondered what the trees would say about us?

What books would they write if they had to cut us down?

 
 

Later, stumbling from the forest I listened

to a young Maori woman.

 
 

She could tell which bird chirped,

a skill she learned from her grandfather

 
 

who said with birds you’re never lonely.

In that moment I felt sorry

 
 

for any grey tree in London,

for the family they don’t have,

 
 

the Gods they can’t hold

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