Stanzas: Monthly Chapbooks December 2014: Winter | Page 17

The Citrus Tree Matthew Moynihan Last night, as darkness bruised the Melbourne sky, I took a stroll and came to rest beneath a citrus tree. A curious orange fell from the tree's paternal grasp and I, taking it as a sign, bit into its toxic flesh. The bitterness! Oh, the bitterness of that deceitful, hazardous fruit, How it mirrored the acidity of my soul. I bore no sweet oranges. As dark clouds enveloped my skyline, Hydrochloric Acid rose from the pit of my stomach and reposed within the chambers of my tainted heart. I felt as though I was entering the winter of my life, and that this internal malaise was the final snowflake to land upon my icy path. Yet while I sat there wallowing, a chrystalline butterfly flew past my eyes. Its beauty and its clear eye compelled me to see the world in a different vein. I must fight for those sweet oranges. I must fight for the brightness. I must fight for love, for passion, for fraternity. And in fighting, I must never forget the painful bitterness of wallowing. This is the spring of my life. 17