Silent, still,
at trembling,
full draw—
I find you, sweet fawn—
you are tucked,
alone,
in the brambles.
Wild, bushy-tailed—aglow with ineptness—
you graze among lush, green grass:
an orphan of forest and stars.
*
I focus, using my dominant eye,
the weight of the bow on my finger: like wind.
Oh lamb,
the horror I am—
are you convinced I have come
to harm you?
*
Our kismets connect here,
though I fear I have painted the scene
I would skin you
and carve out
your marrow.
I am not a monster, my dove—
only a wandering ghost:
without you,
I am made phantom of all
I could be.
*
I know not where the trees may end anymore,
dear thing—
I am root-wish,
and leaf-love,
and branches—all arrows—
that ever-reach
and arc
for you—
your eidolon has become
my wildwood.
Oh, and when the sweet,
soft junipers sigh,
I sense you—
do you heed
my heartbeats
in secret?
Or do you quicken, my rabbit,
and scamper?
*
Wildwood, wildwood,
I dread in my core
I’ve been searching so long—
I’ve become
the steel of
my crossbow.
*
I nock and
I aim, and lo—
I emerge, tame (in these)
thickets of
tangles and panic.
But in my starred-eyes
you only see glints of my
wild,
starved teeth,
and vanish.
About the Creator
Gina C.
Poet | Author | Architect of Worlds
Sowing stories rooted in culture, origin, metamorphosis, resilience, language & love via fantasy, myth, magical realism & botanical prose
Writing my novel!🧚🏻♀️🐉✨




Comments (5)
Your imagery is stunning, part myth, part confession, part forest-dream. It wraps the reader in its quiet danger.
Well-wrought! I love this reverent take on the hunt, the way it honors the pursuit as a necessary part of the nature-dance rather than mere sport.
My god, this is beautiful and evocative in equal measure, Gina. What a triumph!
A great feeling of actually being there
This was absolutely beautiful! Loved your poem so much!