a Lenape man asked why schools don’t teach
kids Earth skills—which weeds to eat,
how to build soil, split firewood,
or companion plant trees that fire
or loggers have orphaned of their mothers.
On this perfect morning,
the native plants hug the dirt road
downstream from the beaver pond—
nannyberry, hazelnut, chokecherry,
elderberry, dogbane, and fleabane,
rich forage for deer and me.
Marx was right and wrong
about the idiocy of rural life.
The city’s thick parade
of human limbs and quips may hone
muscle and tongue, keep one humble
and hip to each new thing.
And it’s true there’s not a thought in my head
worthy of you, Reader,
just names of plants I’ve met in books
or out walking, the scent-notes of cinnamon
ferns over late mice inviting sexton
beetles under the porch. I’m listening
for other tongues, breathing smoky air
with the winged, furred, petaled beings right here,
the us of this latitude, whatever remains
of our tenuous lifespans,
our heart roots
woven underground.