Blackberry Song By Aleise Here
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.
Aleise sang about those berries like they were small, secret lives. Her voice held a gentle hunger—equal parts memory and invitation—and whenever she hummed the chorus I could see her hands stained purple, the kernels pressed between her thumb and forefinger. She said the vines remembered summers the way people remember faces: by the way light fell across them and by the small violences of picking. You never took a blackberry without an exchange. A thorn would catch your sleeve. A stain would mark your palm. A mouthful would hush you. blackberry song by aleise
When storms came, the vines got heavy and dangerous. Branches snapped and thorns tangled, and we learned when to let the blackberries be—some harvests were for the soil. Aleise’s voice changed with the season; in September there was relief, a quieter note, the kind that comes after work finished. In late October, when frost turned fruit to small, bitter things, she’d say the vines had given their last grace and we should rest. The blackberry vines reached everywhere: over the old
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. Her voice held a gentle hunger—equal parts memory