People seeing it for the first time
called it, variously, jungle or
desert, the grasses taller than
a man on horseback. Westward
wagon trains passed lightly
along ruts carved through
by natives or buffalo or fire
or previous trail cutters,
grasses simultaneous wonder
and irritation. No one looked,
or realized, what was beneath
the grasses, vast and deep
communities of insects, roots,
soil, reptiles, bacteria, organisms
of the grasses often as deep as
the grasses visible. Not until
the farmers came, paused,
then stopped, did what was
underneath become an object
to consider, a barrier, an obstacle,
something only useful for a roof,
to expose the soil below, waiting
for the wind.
The editors of Tweetspeak Poetry are hosting a 30-Day, 30-Poem Challenge for Earth Month entitled, appropriately enough, Poetic Earth Month. Today, the featured poem is “Do the Shells” by L.L. Barkat, and the poetry promptis to consider the “deep-downness” of things.
Photograph: Restored prairie at Shaw Nature Reserve, Franklin County, Missouri.
Starkly beautiful:
ReplyDelete"a barrier, an obstacle,
something only useful for a roof,
to expose the soil below, waiting
for the wind."