Blackberry Song By Aleise Page
Years later, when I found a place with its own bramble tangled against the fence, Aleise’s lines came back to me without my asking. I moved like someone remembering choreography—sleeves rolled, bowl at my hip, a habit that fit my hands. The berries stained me the same way: purple at the nails, a smear across the palm that refused to wash out for a day. The song followed in my head, soft and precise, and in the way I picked there was the understanding that some harvests are about more than fruit: they teach how to be patient, how to care, and how to accept small wounds in exchange for sweetness.
The blackberry vines reached everywhere: over the old stone wall, through the gap in the fence, curling like dark, sticky fingers into the sunlit yard. Each morning I walked the same narrow path past them, barefoot on the cool flagstones, and for a while I pretended I wasn’t watching the heavy clusters of fruit swell into glossy, bruised-black beads. blackberry song by aleise
Her songs were small instructions hidden in melody. “Keep your pockets empty,” she’d sing, “so you can use both hands.” She taught me to check under leaves for worms, to tilt a berry toward the sun before deciding, to share evenly so no one went home with the last sweet without exchange. Practical things, done so often they became rituals. We made jam sometimes, stirring until the kitchen smelled of boiled sugar and late summer. The jars lined up on the counter felt like trophies for patience. Years later, when I found a place with