The Garden
Seeds pushed into soil crumbled by fingers
Late spring heat already cracking the ground
Parcels of dirt too poor to grow anything
Still we plant the germ for tomato and chive
Out of the dry, fissured clods, food to grow
Perhaps we look in the wrong places for peace
Expecting it to claw its way above the earth
Perhaps we must soak less the anger of our fears
That fuels the fires of hate, rage, and blindness
If we hope to harvest a season of sustenance
No wall can contain my own or leave yours behind
Nor should I expect a kernel of hate to produce
The food to nurture a body, to grow a heart
Only by opening the hard surface of ground
And that of one’s soul can anything grow
I will listen, I will look into your eyes
As long as you also listen, do not look away
My feet may dance to different music
But the blood in my body pools red as yours
You may not spill it for your produce of hate
Neither of us will bloom in a garden of death
No child will thrive beside stumps left by fire
You may not plant those craven seeds
Cower instead in your ruined clot of earth
Let my garden grow
Remembering massacres in Jerusalem and Orlando and Paris and San Bernardino and Charleston and Fort Hood and on and on and on too far
Black mourning ribbon image courtesy: publicdomainvectors.org