The Old Apple Tree
Dear Diary,
On the north side of my house is a very old apple tree. It has always reminded me of the one at my childhood home in which my grandfather helped me build a tree house when I was quite small. It was a favorite hideout for a little girl who cherished her own company. I had to share it with my brother but when I knew he was off somewhere else I would escape to the tree house. I could pull up the ladder and be completely alone there.
The best time was spring. The tree would be in blossom and a robin usually built a nest nearby. The air was scented in a heavenly way and when the wind blew it would rain pink petals. Even at that early age I understood the need for a retreat. Maybe that's why I love to go on solitary retreats to an abbey now that I am at the other end of my life.
I do remember the overwhelming sadness I felt when my father knocked down the old tree to re-grade the backyard. Its uniform flatness was sterile and totally unappealing to me and my heart ached for that tree house even though I was a teenager by that point and it was too rickety to use anyway. It was the death of childhood I grieved along with the tree itself.
Now, I can sit on my porch and look at this old tree and remember my grandfather and that special place we created in the apple tree. I sometimes think this tree was part of the reason I bought the house 20 years ago.
We could never have loved the earth so well if we had had no childhood in it. ~George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss, 1860
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