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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