A Shape in the Forest – Charles Hensler
I’d rather play a piano, my hands
off on their own, the notes the only thing
I want you to see: how they rise in a diamond
blue air.
Descent has promised us nothing—
a too-loud wind, a fall through an uncharted canopy
waiting with its green embrace, its love
of disappearances.
If you refer to your brochure, this forest
can breath and sigh—a passage played tree
after tree. We can stand at the edge
listening, or maybe
come back some other time, walk in at dusk
half-drawn in the papery crowd, none of us more
than the weight of a shadow.
Besides, with the sun still lit behind the trees
it’s too bright now, looking in, too dark
looking down.

Charles Hensler lives and writes in the Pacific Northwest. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Shore, One Hand Clapping, West Trade Review, Pidgeonholes, ballast, boats against the current and others.