Wednesday, November 21, 2018

from “poems for a brown eyed girl”

Her feet 
were calloused and cracked  
like rocks 
in plowed ground, 
like stones 
in turned soil, 
the soil 
she walked over 
barefooted 
as her grandfather 
plowed and turned 
the earth 
with donkey and plow. 

She had 
the feet 
of her grandfather, 
for she had walked 
beside him 
down the long rows 
of beans and corn 
since the time 
she learned 
to toddle. 

He had 
walked 
up and down 
those rows 
until his feet 
were broken and bent 
and made him appear 
to be 
continually 
genuflecting 
to God, 
or to the wealthy land owner, 
or to the land itself. 

Her feet 
would one day 
be broken and bent 
like that.

When her feet 
were in the soil 
it was 
as if 
they were part 
of the land, 
as if 
they held the secrets 
of the earth, 
as if 
they knew the mystery 
of how seed 
and dirt 
and water 
can become 
a bean 
in a pod,
a kernel 
on an ear 
of corn. 

Her heart 
was in her feet, 
her heart 
was in the land, 
her heart 
was in the mystery 
itself.

Her feet spoke, 
"Estoy aquí, 
I am here, 
estoy aquí." 

Her feet 
were signs 
to the world - 
"I am 
a human being." 


- Trevor Scott Barton, poems for a brown eyed girl, 2018

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