A single, trailing vine snakes through the grass,
leaves green.
My shoes crunch on dirt.
I grab it
and pull.
With it rises a net of vines,
straining in tangled cords,
running under grass and over ground.
I gather the lines in my hands.
Too strong together—one at a time
roots rip free from earth.
Hand over hand,
coiling a fibrous rope,
green, sticky juices stain the pads of my fingers.
Two strain taut.
Snap!
Roots remain.
One thick vine neither snaps nor slides.
I follow, hand over hand,
to its home in the earth.
A finger hooks under.
A spurt of dirt!
Out it comes.
Trailing ends I gather,
a hairy bundle for burning.
Back to the ground.
A single, trailing vine snakes through the grass,
leaves green.
My shoes crunch on dirt.
I grab it
and pull.
(Hebrews 12:1-4)
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