• Learn More
    • About Me
    • Contact
    • Order Books
  • Artwork
  • Jesus Comics
  • Culminating Project
  • Art Class
Happy Ambassador Art

Illustration with Purpose Creativity with Power

  • Learn More
    • About Me
    • Contact
    • Order Books
  • Artwork
  • Jesus Comics
  • Culminating Project
  • Art Class

Fall of Chestnut

“Pride comes late summer” - Hebrew proverb (paraphrased)


I.


In central park there sits a chestnut tree

Who grows up near a field of shining green

Where picnicers will often come to bask

In sunlight stretched upon the tender grass

They often come with picnics that they packed

Or bring along some money for a snack

The field is a joyous sight to see

Especially if you’re a chestnut tree


The tree watched happy people every day

They came and they enjoyed his blessed shade

For chestnut trees have wide, reflecting leaves

That, catching sunlight, ripple in the breeze

And cast a shadow cool and yet refracting

The glory of the sunlight not subtracting

His wondrous leaves refined the summer joy

And he was glad that he was so employed


The tree believed green branches were a gift

That he could bless the strolling people with

And so he watched the people come and go

Invested in their business down below 


The tree felt joy when seeing couples kiss

He thought he was responsible for this

And when a man proposed one afternoon

He fancied he had helped to set the mood

And when the children ventured after school

In heated play this chestnut kept them cool

And oftentimes a biker needing rest

Would lean his bike against the tree and stretch

The momentary shade would make his day

Revived the tree would send him on his way


And so in human love the tree delighted

But also in him animals alighted

Spry squirrels would often scamper up his trunk

And chatter with a loud and frantic spunk

With boldness only city squirrels attempt

For urban rodents have no fear of men


But if a dog came strolling down the path

At once towards nearby trees the squirrels would dash

The chestnut offered refuge in his branches

To hide among his leaves from canine glances


Another time a mighty red tailed hawk

Alighted in the leaves his prey to stalk

He sat unspotted hour after hour

In patient search of something to devour

And this alone could satisfy the tree

But when the giant bird was finally seen

The people pulled out cameras and phones

And wouldn’t leave the special bird alone

Oh how the chestnut grew in pride that day

For hours on end the people looked his way

How many people now would see the tree

When looking through their photo gallery

And celebrate him every time they talked

To friends about the photo of the hawk? 


In short, these summer days were full of fun

The tree felt he was loved by everyone

The picnickers, the little boys and girls

The bikers, tourists, lovers, hawks, and squirrels

They all had found a blessing from the tree

And so the chestnut loved his shining leaves


He thought he was a presence quite divine

So glad to be a tree with leaves that shine

He thought “I’m glad that I’m not unreflective

For spreading sunlight is a tree’s objective”

“In fact,” he thought, “there wouldn’t be much worth

In living as a tree upon this Earth

If I were not to have so clear a purpose

I guess a tree that doesn’t shine is worthless.” 


II.


This all occurred throughout July and June

The summer made his sense of pride balloon

He thought himself the finest in the park

And didn’t even care that after dark

The city glowed with light he couldn’t share

The buildings were not trees, he didn’t care

“These folks will simply have to wait till dawn

Before they have a tree to gaze upon.”

He thought these things but then one August day

He noticed two old trees across the way

Some distance off he saw two aging cedars

And noticed that he saw no shine in either

The shade beneath the pair was dark and grave

Out of their branches no light could escape

Their leaves were rolled up tightly into spikes

And sticky sap meant no one leaned their bikes

Nor would a loving couple linger there

For needles dropped and scattered everywhere

The trees were tall but seemed to lack all grace

“I'm glad,” he thought, “that I am not like they.

My spreading leaves are perfectly designed

I wouldn’t wish for any other kind.”


But at this thought, a sparrow chanced to fly

Upon a cool breeze swirling in the sky

As if the Maker, through this little bird

Was telling him this thinking was absurd

For with the sparrow came a gust of wind

Which blew a golden leaf off of a limb

The horror struck chestnut watched the symbol fall

And noticed that a gold now covered all

The corners of his leaves were now invaded

With browning yellow altering the shade

No longer green the chestnut held his breath

For in his heartwood he knew what was next

In pride the tree had totally forgotten

What happens to a chestnut tree in autumn

He panicked as he felt the cooling wind

The city knew September once again


As weeks went on the nights were wet and chilled

At least the children came to see him still

But bikers now wore long sleeve shirts and found

They didn’t need his shade to cool them down

And then the day he dreaded came at last

They put up signs which read “keep off the grass”


Now I must add that were you to behold

The autumn hue of fast and flitting gold

You’d think this chestnut’s panic was quite silly

You’d wish he could be seen by all the city

For some trees have a tendency to brown

A slow and lowly fade of winding down

But this bold chestnut’s colors danced and sang

So you would likely scoff now at his pain


But this thought never crossed the chestnut’s mind

His love of gleaming green had made him blind

He saw that winter soon would come to dwell

And all his summer joys would be dispelled

It wasn’t long before with naked limbs

The chestnut sighed and winter settled in.


The gloomy tree now spread out gray and bare

His empty branches stuck up in the air

And this to him was such a deep disgrace

He couldn’t stand to look upon the place

Where once the people had such merry fun

In his mind all those happy days were done

So sick was he just thinking of his loss

It was a month before he looked across

And saw the cedars darkened as before

But now the tree perceived that there was more

They looked as healthy as they’d ever been

For in the winter still their bows were green

The only real green within the park

No longer did their shadows seem so dark


In winter’s gray the cedar tree reminds

The people of the summer left behind

And of the hope that one day we’ll see spring

That winter is a pale and passing thing

The chestnut didn’t think about this fact

He should have stopped to think and then been glad

That now the dirty cedars could be seen

Despite their darker shades of shineless green

For winter serves to balance out the story

That every tree may have a time of glory


But come December as the chestnut watched

All traces of humility were lost

He watched a merry crowd with wire  strands

Which merrily they laid upon each r branch

They draped the cedar trees in little lights

Which made them both shine brightly in the night

The lights seemed better even than the sun

The cedars didn’t rely on anyone

This glory was their own and was profound

They shone out in the park to all around


And so the chestnut tree began to pout

“Why should the cedars be the ones to tout 

The glory as a public Christmas tree

The people never stopped to honor me

By wrapping me with light all of my own

Just wait until December's early snow

The lights will twinkle down upon the ground

And then reflecting shimmer all around

So that the darkest night will be like day

And cast the winter darkness all away

Cause even if I wait until the spring

To see the blooming life the season brings

I doubt that anyone would ever wrap

A tree like me in light as fine as that

I fear I’ll find the honor goes unshared

I see the glory isn’t mine, it's theirs.”

With that the proud tree hung his branches low

And prayed he may be covered by the snow.


III.


And through the winter then the chestnut waited

Until cold of early March abated

Replaced by warming days and melting breeze

The squirrels awoke the chestnut from his sleep

He saw the summer glory would return

But still he couldn’t shake what he had learned

He watched the cedars far across the lawn

The twinkling of Christmas lights was gone

But still they had their sagging coats of green

And though not shiny always were they seen

“I wish” he thought, “That I could be like them

To hold my leaves forever on my limbs

No longer be a slave unto the season

But hold my leaves in weather warm or freezing

And so that day the chestnut tree resolved

To keep his leaves throughout the coming fall

He couldn’t stop his leaves from turning brown

But he would keep them all from falling down


And so as joyful summer months slipped past

He practiced holding with a solid grasp

And when the swooning lovers lay beneath

He took account of every single leaf

And as the cheerful children sat around

He watched to be sure not oneleaf fell down

And when the bikers stopped to take a drink

He never would rejoice but only think

Of bows and branches he must not ignore

To keep his leaves, unlike the year before


(Now you might ask me, If this tree was big

Enough to offer shade beneath his limbs

Why was he so surprised when autumn came

When other years it would have been the same?


Why was he shocked to see the leaves in fall

If other years he hadn’t cared at all?

He must have known that all the leaves come back

And shouldn’t have been scared to see the lack.

Indeed all this is true, I tell you now

The tree did know, the question then is how

Did he somehow forget this year in question?

The answer I don’t know, but my impression

Is that it must have been the swelling pride

Which lays as sort of veil across your eyes

You see the world unlike it was before

You see your neighbor still but love you more

You think just of your lack, not your excesses

Which doesn’t give you joy, it just depresses

For envy doesn’t seek to balance scales

It hopes you shine out while your neighbor pales

Until the tipping’s only in your favor

Securely yours and sure to never waver

So pride and envy never really help

They mix you up and turn you on yourself

Until you find that all you love is lost

You gain the world but didn’t count the cost

But I digress, let’s get back to our tale

I’ll tell you how the chestnut’s striving failed…)


IV.


This year, September came with quite stealth

To tear away the summer and its wealth

The sparrow led the wind all through the park

The chestnut felt the breeze upon his bark

And tightly taking hold of all his leaves

He stood in calm defiance of the breeze

Which shook his bows and branches top to bottom

But not a single leaf was shaken off him

His summer spent in practice had payed off

His leaves would last, the temperature would drop


And proudly he imagined if his bows

Could keep their normal beauty all year round

Perhaps the crowds, inspired by the sight

Would wrap him in a strand of Christmas lights

And he would shine with light all of his own

With splendor only conifers had known

The tree convinced himself this was his fate

A festive future, he just had to wait


But waiting there he noticed something strange

The fall had come and slowly his leaves changed

But not the way they’d shifted in the past

From green to gold with near translucent flash

The tips every leaf was turning brown

It spread from lower branches up the crown

The slow and sorry fading, dull and mellow

It went from green to brown and skipped the yellow


So as he watched he saw that every day

The shiny brightness of his leaves decayed

Until the leaves he clung to all were dead

And rustled like a migraine in his head

The breeze would blow and still they wouldn’t fall

He had resolved to keep them, after all

But now his vanity was wearing thin

He knew he couldn’t turn them green again

“I’ve got to shake these leaves for now I know

It’s only on bare branches green can grow

But will I? Can I?” Thought the chestnut tree

Or are these now forever part of me?


November saw him trying to release them

To no avail, it made him hate the season

For nothing he could do could loose the leaves

Dejectedly he hung his head and grieved


V.


December came and with it Christmas lights

The chestnut looked and shuddered at the sight

The cedars shone once more adorned by men

While he was darker than he’d ever been


Then winter brought full force in January

An ice storm hit the city, cold and scary

For one whole day the ice winds whipped around

And ripped even secure trees from the ground

The chestnut felt the power of the wind

Which tore through all his branches and his limbs

He felt the pain of cold bottom to top

But still the icy winds refused to stop

His leaves collected heavy coats of ice

He knew he soon would have to pay the price

And soon his leaves were frozen deep in layers

In pain the panicked tree raised up a prayer

That somebody would stop this deadly winter

From breaking off his limbs in frozen splinters


When evening came he felt the storm subside

Though still in pain, the chestnut was alright

But sensed that he bent low from all the weight

Of countless leaves he’d offered up too late

The thick ice clung to every leaf and now

It pulled on him and dragged him towards the ground 

He felt the painful strain upon his limbs

It hurt his bark and left him feeling grim

This icy pull was more than he could bear

And so he offered up another prayer:


“I want to be delivered from this burden

I want to know my heartwood hasn’t hardened

I’m willing to accept all pain and hurt

I know today what losing’s really worth

But some spring, down the road, some way, somehow

I pray I may see green upon my bows

And not despise the sunlight as it shines

But know its gifted glory isn’t mine

By grace his glory shines unique in me

For I am but a catalyst I see

And so I ask as from their weight I bend

Remove my leaves that I may shine again!”


And as he prayed this prayer he saw a beam

Of sunlight through the clouds shine on a leaf

And watched ice that coated it refract

It cast the sunlight inward, down and back

And all around the chestnut could be found

Light, shining specks of rainbow on the ground

The day grew brighter and the colors swirled

The snow below reflecting like a pearl

The sun then rose in all its glory up

And cast into the tree its golden love

Which overwhelmed the tree with all the light

That danced among the fractals in his sight

And then, I only wish he could have known

But on that winter day the chestnut shone

The light was bold and radiant and pure

Like nothing central park had seen before


And maybe he was beckoned by the light

But swooping down the hawk came into sight

And gliding to the tree as if invited

He picked a branch and carefully alighted

He sat and watched the beauty of the park

Then suddenly a cracking of the bark

The bow he sat upon violently snapped

The crystals shattered downward with a crash

The hawk let out a cry alarmed and shrill

Then flew away and everything was still


The chestnut tree had splintered into two

His chilly trunk was hurt, he somehow knew

That in the snow beside him lay his crown

With shattered ugly leaves scattered about

He’d lost  his leaves and all his branches too

So now there wasn’t anything to do

His pride and envy caused him to hold fast

To blessings which were never meant to last

But feeling missing branches it sunk in

He’d never grow a bright green leaf again

His hopes lay like his branches, cold and shattered

The glory he had sought no longer mattered

For glory is a crude and passing thing

He drifted off and waited for the spring


Epilogue


He woke to feel a hand upon his bark

And looked to see a tender of the park

Spring had arrived or would arrive quite soon

He squinted at the April afternoon

And at the man whose jacket read “parks service”

‘I gotta say, this old tree didn’t deserve this’

Another worker came and asked the man

‘You think we ought to bring the chipper in?’

The first man shook his head and touched the tree

‘His heartwood’s still alive, let’s wait and see,

He may survive the season, I can’t tell

You’ll notice only half his branches fell

The branches that he lost looked to the West

But East is where the sunshine shines the best

Because his Eastern branches are in tact

I reckon we might see his leaves grow back

In other words, survival will be tough

But in the sun he might get life enough

To make it through the season and keep growing 

It’s up to him though, there’s no way of knowing.’


The chestnut felt his branches and was glad

To realize how many he still had

The shock of snapping in that winter frost

Had led him to believe they all were lost

But now he saw the ranger was correct

His Eastward branches all had stayed in tact

And also he had started dropping leaves

The brown would not remain he now could see

And as the workers dragged away the limbs

The humbled chestnut sang a joyful hymn


“Praise to the one who bids me rise

And bids me fall and bids me lie

And bids me sing and bids me glow

And brings me high and brings me low

And shows me mercy, grace, and love

And sends his sunshine from above

And prunes my branches and strips my leaves

And gives them back and helps me see

That come what may, be it sunshine or snow

The glory I share in is not my own”


Saturday 10.28.23
Posted by Jashton Gieser
 

Powered by Squarespace.