To whomever left the great bouquet of parsley in the gardenβ
thank you.
We heard some engine sound from far across the field
and went to see
and saw
a tractor, red, turning soil into silk
tillingΒ long, slow rows and turning long, slow turns
and with each turn the garden turned from crumpled earth to silk.
And there before the tractor was
the parsley.
A great mound of greenβ
a beacon green amidst a sea of soil.
And I imagined rabbits
dancing
holding hands in the light of last Sundayβs round orange moon
praising parsley sacred as the cows of Indiaβ
so sacred it should go untouched all through the frosts
and through the snows of winter.
Untouchedβ
but then there was that tractor, turning
plowing slow rows, slow.
And so I stepped into, onto, unto the unturned earth
and took
your parsley (sacred parsley)
just before the tractor turned its turn
to mow.
So.
If you would like one last bite of this yearβs parsleyβ
sacred parsleyβ
sacred as the cows of Indiaβ
parsley praised by
rabbits far and wideβ
please, do come visit.Β
We have some in our fridge.
We shall be eating it
and feeding it to friends
and to family
and to rabbits who dance
by the light of the hunter’sΒ moon.