- - September, 2015
There was
only one candidate, really, that had so many opposite pairs
of small rounded leaves.
We saw it
first, if you ever see anything a first time,
waiting for
the bus to Orient.
The field
guide insisted on thorns. Long thorns, strong enough
to nail shingles to a roof.
And pods
full of seeds swimming in pulp that tasted of honey?
It
was a legume for god's sake.
Its roots
probably bound nitrogen.
I trusted its identity when I found the female.
Her branches were sagging. She was overwhelmed
with pods--weeping like a willow.
I trusted its identity when I found the female.
Her branches were sagging. She was overwhelmed
with pods--weeping like a willow.
What towns wanted were fruitless, thornless males.
Fewer seedlings to weed. Less bird
shit
smeared across windshields. Can one female keep parked rows
of males healthy? Will they keep her
brimming with seeds each fall? Why do poems about stones,
tumbling in forever receding waters,
smeared across windshields. Can one female keep parked rows
of males healthy? Will they keep her
brimming with seeds each fall? Why do poems about stones,
tumbling in forever receding waters,
make me so
fucking sad?
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