When Billie Holiday Sings about Southern Trees

and blood on the leaves, you see the congruent drip

inscribe moonlit ground. You smell old magnolias.

The piano plays a dirge; the trumpet plays one, too.

The weight of wrong is in the voice that soars and

explodes an idea that our burdens are inert things

too heavy to lift. Everything about blood flowers.

And the knots and cordage a lynched man strains

against before the longing in every muscle relaxes.

She’s singing, Here is a fruit for the crows to pluck

and we hear the creak of a branch accepting a rope.

We hear the awful noise that is like no hinge singing.

After we imagine this, what goes out from each of us

isn’t like breath. It’s more a needing to look away

before making a eucharist of regret. Take this song.

The essential miracle isn’t that old movie of pain

with the torch singer sporting an orchid in her hair,

the dead heroine with her history of tragic stardom.

It isn’t an angelic-voiced immortal or the song itself.

The miracle is we use it to redeem part of the world.