Nature’s Revered Teachers
The old pine tree teaches wisdom,
and the cry of the wild bird expresses truth.
~ Zen koan
The silent stone—
how it lectures on the sacredness
of stillness and muteness.
The Pleistocene,
time of great extinctions,
teaches mystery and curiosity—
was it a star dragon
thrusting out its tongue,
or the heat of meteoritic impact?
Meltwater teaches chemistry
and tragedy, and most important
perhaps these days, humility.
The blushing peach—
what a wordless lesson
it can teach.
The fire, tempering the sword,
clarifies how we, too, require softening
if we are to resist breaking.
The owl, turning its head
160 degrees, exemplifies that being
anticipatory is only half the story.
La Venta and San Lorenzo,
southern Mexico, from
whose ground colossal stone heads
of the lost Olmec culture
were unearthed, teach the ghostly
hush of vanishment.
Windborne swirls of silvery seeds
suggest that man also has the need
to launch off to new worlds.
And the poisoned dying bee,
in perfect stillness, teaches eternity—
takes us back to the Book of Romans,
all creation groaning for salvation.

- The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Wolves in Shells by Kimberly Ann Priest - June 2, 2026
- The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Wolves in Shells by Kimberly Ann Priest - June 1, 2026
- We Call Upon the Author to Explain—Jackie Domenus - May 31, 2026


