Mercy

Mercy by Tyehimba Jess

Mercy
The war speaks at night with its lips of shredded children, with its brow of plastique and its fighter jet breath, and then it speaks at daybreak with the soft slur of money unfolding leaf upon leaf. It speaks between the news programs in the music of commercials, then sings in the voices of a national anthem. It has a dirty coin jingle in its step, it has a hand of many lost hands, a palm of missing fingers, the stump of an arm that it lost reaching up to heaven, a foot that digs a trench for its dead. The war staggers forward, compelled, inexorable, ticking. It looks to me with its one eye of napalm and one eye of ice, with its hair of fire and its nuclear heart, and yes, it is so human and so pitiful as it stands there, waiting for my hand. It wants to know my answer. It wants to know how I intend to show it out of its misery, and I only want it to teach me how to kill.

It has a dirty coin jingle in its step.

Comments

Abigail George said…
War is a dark thread, a fire that consumes humanity directly or indirectly. It's difficult to write about war or genocide. It's a strange subject but your companion for life once you choose to write about it or it chooses you. It's darkness and psychological framework never completely releases you from sadness. Perhaps all poets walk a solitary path into war. Helpless, the poet keeps finding dead bodies, bodies damaged beyond repair. To write with grace and a thorough sensitivity, a thorough investigation is our way, perhaps the only way of journeying back to the destination called life. I am so utterly grateful to poets of this calibre. They have taught me how to reason, how to soothe myself, how to forgive and teach and heal and be generous with my resources but most importantly how to live sane in an insane world that sends boys to war.