Tyrant Spells in
Excessive Heat Sees Old Trees Uprooted Alongside Toodyay-Perth Road as the
Biosphere Collapses In a Heap to be Mulched (Seeds Collected for Later Resowing
in the Spirit Of...) in The Name of Safety
‘But a
tyrant spell has bound me,
And I
cannot, cannot go.
The giant
trees are bending’
Emily Brontë
These trees I see
now on this surveyed zone
are not ours per se, but we have responsibility
under the tyranny. Even if we plant
a seed and it grows to sapling and tree
we do not own the growth or even
the tree’s body when it deceases.
And so the local naturalist club does
a deal with government tree-killers incorporated —
‘give some up to save some’ — and ‘stakeholders’
who are informed make their cases and seeds
are collected and deep-seated flooded gums
are tumbled. Offsets.
In the jaws of the embodied
hologram of an arcade claw machine transmigrated
to do its coin-feeders’ bidding, always responding
where aimed and succeeding in grabbing the killed trees’
fluffy ‘all the same’ canopy and dropping down
the mulcher’s gullet — steel-capped grin. The personal agony
of failed protest before protest can even happen aside —
it’s on your doorstep and signed off on righteously
(road trauma is real but there are other ways of holding
back
the slaughter) — vested interests tearing down life-towers,
intensive housing project for non-human life along the
roadside —
and the compulsory reclamation of what’s
outside the reserve to enact the vision
of transport. Giant trees bend then are torn out
like teeth, the heavy snow of fallout in the overheating —
I cannot pass without the pain deluding
me into an acceptance of falls with machine’s
anaesthetics offering nothing more than a brief
respite from culpability — ‘the community’
having answered in all our names, Babbeled tree-talk.
Why not travel slower, speak slower? Take
curves gradually with shade against the burn?
Let life-growth show a way through office-decisions
all bravado in the field — suits mingling with work clobber
hard to get clean: break the
tyrant spell, and let us all go,
go through unbreaking unbroken less excessive less overheated.
John
Kinsella
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