Photo courtesy of Mike Sanborn |
I dreamt a sword fight broke out in the cornfield
I was dodging poison arrows in the brassica
tripping over minefields in the brussel sprouts which
when stripped of their leaves
look like tiny holiday trees lined up
like an enchanted forest
but then what enchantment doesn’t conceal
the poison apple
or the rings of power?
The mind will do its sorting in the night
placing red peppers with red
yellow with yellow
and arming our imaginary enemies
with machetes glistening
in the morning dew and waiting
to be thrust
while the bearer smiles that sickly
sweet smile of revenge
On the farm there are rows and rows
of potential by design
a surreal order and magnificence
here the ducks laugh at our jokes
even when we aren’t telling any
and the goats who
peer from faces of wizened benevolence
peer from faces of wizened benevolence
like to be pet hard and will butt your hand
up against the fence post
if you don’t comply
Even the compost pile seems holy beautiful
an opera of color glistening with contradiction
mountains of purple potatoes set off
the oranges and greens and reds
of squash, kale, cucumber, tomato
enough uneaten food to fill the bellies
of all those homeless veterans who nurse
their despair along abandoned train tracks
where no train is going anywhere
Amidst this rot and stench
the fruit flies at least
seem to know that decay
is a petri dish for paradise and
the cycle of life to death to life is
as beautiful as any other taking place
under this harvest moon which
casts the long shadows of disrobing trees
onto the jeweled and glistening landscape
of the first frost
Last night I dreamt we were all
quietly harvesting when
a sword fight broke out our
bodies joined the limbless victims of
countless repeating wars and
the hatred that is spawned by injustice
cleansed itself transformed itself
in the bloodied fields of zinnia
and sunflowers
On the farm the soul can tumble
among encroaching wildflowers dance
with the westerly winds of change
while surrendering vegetation bends
to a greater will knowing
that nothing is ever lost or futile knowing
that here there is enough space for battles
to be lost and won and lost again
without speaking a single word
Yes. That is a good poem. Gripping to the last. Thank you.
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