Self-Portrait in a Scorched Forest
David Ehmcke | Poetry
I didn’t ask to be trapped in a matchstick castle,
a natural labyrinth with a canopy-
roof and huge roots curled like the fists of men.
When I was born, I was planted,
an uncongenial husk, flaxen-haired with a hay-fever
face. For boys like me history’s a cleave
the ax intention leaves in the trunk of the oak
whose branches I hide in the faux-
fire of. Without tools, my ax is what I force
my hands to do. I make them into
a rabbit, then a gun, then I bang at my grenade-
heart like I’d the skin of a drum.
My hummingbird-eyes scan horizontally at a predator’s
declination. The crude truth of the tree
of life is life, for only some. I’m looking for answers
in the brush. I’m seeking the charnel sum:
the snake overhead that thrashes in the beak of a hawk,
the mouse now a bulge in the scythe
of the snake, the wild apple pocked by holes
the rodent made. But through a break
in the brute leaves a spear of light singes the foliage,
and lust for meat makes the camouflage
melt. So I’m running through bramble-wire, through
murderbird shadows, my body a dark song
chiding the old world to change. When I speak,
I throw the molotov cocktail
in the throat to praise a phoenix briefness, a slant look
at an ersatz hell. The forest, razed,
is a theater in which new life is staged. I’m out for
vengeance, misunderstood, a hateful blur.
I’m a weird disease, caustic, a jungle music tearing
through the trees. When the apparently
natural world moves around me, it forms a grisly whirl.
You are grotesque, it says, and I am
grotesque. But I’m the star of this picaresque.
When I sing, a flower burns.
David Ehmcke lives in Brooklyn. His recent work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Drift, The Missouri Review, Image, EPOCH, The Adroit Journal, MAYDAY, bodega, and like a field. David’s chapbook, Broken Lyre, is the editors’ selection in Quarterly West’s 2025 Chapbook Contest and will be published by them in the coming year.