7. Epilogue: The Seed Beyond Memory
In the hush that follows the final felling,
a single green shoot splits the loam—
a quiet revolt against iron and debt.
Here, ancient roots unravel their sorrow,
whispering of birdsong trapped in sapwood,
and of seasons that cycle beyond our leases.
Madame Ranevskaya’s laughter drifts
like pollen on a midsummer breeze,
softening the earth’s hardened ledger;
Lopakhin’s hammer, once a verdict,
now strikes rhythm upon fresh bark,
beat of possibility in every ring.
Trofimov’s raven call cleaves the dawn,
an invocation of futures unbound,
while Varya and Anya kneel in the furrow—
two sisters sowing hope into furled petals,
each grain a promise traced by tender hands.
And Firs, bent but unbroken, murmurs
of patience older than any human vow,
his breath the wind that carries seed to sky.
The orchard stands not as tombstone
but as altar to what endures:
memory made fertile by loss,
love grafted on the wounds of time,
and in that silent glade of rebirth,
we learn at last to plant our losses,
to worship the green that rises
from every shattered crown.
Here, beneath Elysian light,
we bow to the seed—
and to the song it whispers:
begin again.
.
So, there.