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Consider the Grass (Free verse) by Dovina

A single leaf from internode wraps, protects a tender stem, leans out to catch the sun. Efficient, simple structure, entwines the neighbors’ roots, sways to wind and rain. East of piney Rockies, west of hardwood Ozarks, Grassland rules the Plain. Buffalo trampled, cattle shaved, entombed by plow and road resilient grass comes creeping back. A lesson rhizomes teach: without its gripping roots, a bare and sterile dustbowl. Today they’re clipping seeds in windy western Kansas taking in the winter wheat, filling world trade centers, skyscrapers on the plain, a gift of grassy grain, Like an ant beside a cola can, I pedal past the Grigston Co-Op in awe of mother grass.

Dovina 1-Jul-07/1:49 PM
I have a memory of the Grassland, the Great Plain between the Rockies and the Ozarks, a conclusion from a collection of observations, most of which have passed from mind. In that sense I must say that those observations did not take place and only my image of their whole remains, an impression. I have memory images that correspond to sensual observations in the past. “Interesting how your mind works with what you see,” as you say. And I may be imagining rather than remembering. Only rockmage mentalities deny this.




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