Mesquite
Jacob Friesenhahn
August 3, 2025
The trunk split early,
never able to choose
a single path,
long limbs twisted and knotted
with time, tentacles stretching low,
daring you to duck beneath,
scarred bark, speckled
with sinful marble
and ball moss,
gray-green goblins
who mean no harm.
The thorns remain,
thrift-store daggers lying in wait
for lawnmower tires
and bare feet. New sandals
are no match.
Others are already bursting.
Pecan, fig, oak, and ash—
they each reach eager hands
toward the sky.
But playing dead,
waiting,
unmoved by soft breeze,
by early March warmth,
no longer trusting Spring,
we have learned
it is the last frost
arriving late
that cuts most deep,
a cruel trick
of ever-changing air,
and so we linger
within winter,
patient and spiteful.
Jacob Friesenhahn is the author of The Prayer of the Mantis (Kelsay Books, 2025). He teaches religious studies and philosophy at Our Lady of the Lake University in San Antonio, Texas.