
South of Eden
.
.
Sometimes
I have to be reminded
So, the rain comes flashing through
pouring life from on high
where the clouds have grown gray and fat
with what someone once said were
“The tears of the devil’s wife”
who was being spanked
and I’m reminded
when all is done
by how glorious and green the world turns
after being drenched and drained of its’ dullness
by the rain
and I’m reminded
by the copious pages of grasses turned again
toward the verdant sheets of green
stretching ever so fully
‘cross the fields and vacant lots
forever sprouting skyward into the heads of trees
sliding with elegance into the valleys and
over the hills
then climbing the ivy against the walls of lattice work and brick
and window trim
and I’m reminded
by how clear and blue and calm
the rain turns the sky
of how sacredly calm the earth’s beauty
can pulse the human blood
and excite the body toward passions long forgotten
of how one simple gaze of
grasses and tree tops turned back to green
and leaves reclaiming their reds and yellows
and the beige and white of buildings pulling up from the ground
the ground churning the brown dust and dirt and earth
into a thing of beauty
like the wide eyes of a woman ready to love
and I’m reminded
by the early morning/late evening smells of that dirt
that earth sectioned off by garden fences
that earth
peeled back against itself into the frenzy of a mound
that earth
and the smell of it all
streaking through the air and finding the nostrils
sparking the heart and the memory
reminding
me to never forget the early mornings of my youth
when the open window brought me this same
fresh-earth aroma
and awoke me to it
so that I’d stumble to that window and look out
into my Mother’s garden
with the tall, green stems bending under the tomato’s growth
while swollen stalks of okra and peas watered the mouth
and branches of pecans and plums and persimmons
rallied their growth against our crunch of apple-pears
in their shade
and watermelons burst under the force of their juices
and sometimes I need to be reminded
that I am south of Eden
with her garden growing dense with promise and remembrances
and I open my mind’s eye to the beauty of it all
and make a wish on never forgetting to know
something this wonderful
is just a rain away
.
.
.
Jas. Mardis
KenteCloth: Southwest Voices of the African Diaspora
Page 62 University of North Texas Press 1997
So vivid and visual. Such poetry fills my senses and has me daring, along with you, to breathe in the rain’s powerful embrace and be transformed! Miss Gladys
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