the pitcher cries for water to carry
And the person for work that is real.
Marge Piercy, “To Be of Use”
In all these stone walls crisscrossing the woods
I see my father’s shoulder blades shifting
under his shirt to heft gneiss slabs into earthforms,
his banker’s back aching each weekend to leave
something elegant in stone.
When my kids enter their twenties,
may they dive into work to salvage a future—
stopping pipelines and redlines, fracking and trawling,
what threatens people, trees, bees, or seas,
seeding intertidal oyster reefs and mangrove swamps
to sieve the swelling, plasticene seas,
deeding ditches and hedgerows
to moose and wood cock, monarch and milk snake,
seeding funds for reparations
and schools kids love,
planting sycamore and oak to shade
vacant lots and concrete streets where statues glared
where elders sweat in shotgun flats
gleaning apple orchards or boardrooms for food banks,
heaping peels and pizza boxes, bioplastics and humanure
into urban vermicultured gold,
retrieving wood, stone and rare earths from hurricanoed coastal mansions,
water lapping at their calves, to build shelter
for climate refugees on inland hills,
adopting one kid, if that—
reviving hankies so the boreal might respire,
designing pinwheel turbines for the headbands of bullet trains
or sleek solar film for the moonroofs of electric cars, bikes,
and the black wells of our phones,
(or weaning off the umbilical cells… )
staying put or on foot, now that we Zoom,
living slower, gentler, [insert your vision here],
synthesizing an ecstatic psychedelic exit
for those of us willing to go
before our senescence bankrupts the next gen
rising each day to do
what our great-grandparents knew to do
and much of what they didn’t,
tending our gardens
in the larger plot.