Legacy & Lemon People, two poems by Carol Carpenter

    Legacy

    Bones blanch white in desert sun.
    Skulls testify, mourn flesh and rivers
    of blood that stain rock sunset red.

    The sky is on fire, a desolate orange.
    Only one Saguaro Cactus remains, arms raised in mock surrender, roots ready to detonate.

    A bomb blasts open earth's black mouth
    spewing boulders from the underground.
    Green tanks roll on caterpillar treads.

    Still, the gods wager against all odds,
    shake two dice and throw. No sacrifice
    appeases blood thirst if they throw seven.

    Such gods play high stake games
    through centuries. They rake in rubble, watch which way twin towers crumble.

    A soldier guards the death cart
    while the brown moth guides spirits
    underground and the serpent strikes.

    Lemon People

    Maria resides in a box, in a place
    she calls home with four walls
    and no address. She plasters
    photos everywhere, buildings she wants
    for her very own on a street she lost somewhere.

    Frederick crosses the line, steps off the curb in front of a yellow bus going too fast.
    The cops hold back crowds who want a peek at a man they never noticed on the street where he snatched purses, money to buy dark birds.

    Minerva sweats at the Rouge Plant
    where steel bubbles, melts, pours into molds that shape her very soul as she clocks in and out. She counts the wages of her work and yearns for the cardinal's song all along.

    We are all lemon people dropped from thorny trees.
    We clutter our space, forget the fields we farmed, ignore the ocean roar -- and suck our own tart juice



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