A Poem for the Innocents
A killing moon peeks through leaves of trumpet trees in full bloom for Lent, their barks crisscrossed by wild strokes of a machete when my son tried to help me weed our garden, overrun with dandelions, branches, leaves, a bounty of seed and thorns, side by side, under clusters of suns bursting through the branches. Shadows flicker across the wall upstairs, over Buzz Lightyear's grin, Mr. Potato Head's sigh, and under a map dotted with cities that fill his dreams. What promises will I make when I climb the stairs before he falls asleep to the noise of the television with cluster bombs blooming in the sky over Baghdad? What comfort can I give him as I draw the sheets over his shoulders, kiss his forehead, when he worries that if he closes his eyes, his Aunt Batsheva, half a world away, will not rise from her bed in Gan Yavne, thirty-seven miles west of Ramah where Rachel wept for her children and refused to be comforted. The map over his bed now frightens him, and I cannot convince him, despite the miles and miles of oceans and deserts, that the machete under his bed will not make him safer, any more than the sacrifice of innocents will save us, for he knows, he knows, somewhere between the Tigris and Euphrates, a wave of steel races toward Babylon. Geoffrey Philp
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