The tyranny of the big over the littler souls
Is never a thing of the past
Harmony in nature?
Perhaps the world’s most forceful paradox
Laws permit the lion to gobble the sheep
The cattle to feed on the lush green leaves
then there are always miscreants to weed
and the unsuspecting titans, the mighty and prickly cacti
What disgrace and what wounds might they suffer
When the mighty mango tree falls on its succulent tender limbs
Those bodies that withstood the stoic June heat
The August rain and the dry, chilly new year
And innocently look forward to a serene virginal spring
Those that have braved the spells of drought
And have sharpened their veins to keep the enemy at bay
And then…all of a sudden…
Crushed under the weight of the cracking cut branches
How selfish is the mange tree now-
No more the beauty of fruit or shade
Now, its minutes are numbered
It blushes greener, fells the cacti anyway
Both lie there now, grasping for a life, cut short
Wait, there is still gasping
Restoration is yet possible
The keepers lament the loss, and plug the final strings
Too difficult to maintain the unchaste cost
In the name of the lord, the father, the creator
The joyful and caring planter, the gardener,
Who too fatal fate didn’t spare
Harmed? Never; displaced? Never
Now impudent hands (and feet)
Carelessly and willingly mangle and trample
Hope not, however, to blame the mango tree
It murdered, but fell to the knife too
Price to harbor pestering and festering unruly elements
Now writ is the new old law of nature
The tyranny of the big over the lesser souls
Will be re-iterated again n again n again.
4/12/06
On the day when the neighbors cut down their tree and let it fall upon the cactus rockery. In spite of being home, there wasn’t a thing she could do about it. Silenced, by the bigger men, she shouted but could not be heard.
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