Elegy for a Tree That Forgot My Name
Image by artchicago from Unsplash
They planted you before I could speak,
and by the time I did,
you’d learned the wind’s tongue instead.
I carved a heart you swallowed in bark
not out of hunger,
but ritual.
Every autumn, you let go
more easily than I do.
Every spring,
you grew further from the boy who named you.
I think I dreamed you once
into stillness.
I think you stayed.
Want more nature reads? Try some of these pieces!
- Poetry – Nature’s Whispers of Colours
- Personal Essay – It’s Raspberry Season, a Creative Garden Series Essay
- Poetry Special – Breath of Nature
- Fitness For Creatives – From the Mountaintops: 5 Hikes for Inspiration

Joshua Walker
Joshua Walker, also known as The Last Bard, is an independent poet whose work explores memory, identity, and the fragile spaces between connection and solitude. Drawing from personal experiences and the layered textures of everyday moments, his poetry weaves raw emotional honesty with vivid metaphor and subtle surrealism. Based in Oklahoma City, Joshua’s work has appeared in numerous literary journals and anthologies, blending introspection with universal themes. When not writing, he advocates for mental health awareness and the enduring power of poetry to capture the unspoken truths of human experience.




