MANKIND
Ross White | Poetry
Despite water, despite nitrates, any plant wilts
under my tending, and when I explore that root,
I wonder what else wastes under my tenderness.
And still I say, I have not killed, and call that good
though I cannot trace God’s outline amid celestial lights
or on the pages of a Bible whose anagram is, too often,
bloodshed. The cockroach crushed underfoot,
the mouse-neck snapped in a trap beneath the sink—
I mouth my virtues guiltless. Who says love
for fellow man is dead? Tomorrow a child
with a gun will enter a school and shoot a child
without a gun. Or maybe the child who gets shot
will have a gun, too: who knows when tomorrow
will be, finally, hopeless. The whirring blades
of a lawnmower outside will mask the crack of air,
the startling bullet we all carry now in our psyches.
Is it any wonder I can’t keep a thing alive?
I once snuck a magnifying glass into the forest
to train the sun on ants. I let it simmer a squirrel
I found, its jaw pried open by death. Who says love
for fellow man isn’t subject to whatever definition
of man you’re using at the time? Blame the doors
to the schoolhouse for opening to the child.
Blame the video games and not the guns,
prescribed stimulants and not the guns, blame
pretty girls (or just victims, maybe, to save
a syllable) and not the guns. Blame the guns
and not the men who made them. Blame the men
dying of starvation, all for want of a single morsel
of divinity, and not the absent Father
whose compass points only in the direction
of sunset. And I say I have not killed, the commandment
sugar on my tongue, but I have poured handfuls
of pills in my mouth then spit them out
and been praised by the only people I ever told
for my bravery. I’ve already died the only death
that matters by thinking life could be worth
so little. It would be braver to live and let live
joyously, but what pumps through my veins
smells like gunpowder and iron. I never found
God or prophet in Quran or New Testament
but each page was a mirror in which I could
see the sinner for what he was. The murderous
brother, in his exile, bred half of mankind.
Tomorrow a child full of hurt will enter a school
and be shot by a child with his father’s rifle.
This is the image we are made to believe
we’re made in. Whoever says love won’t save you
has died the only death that matters, the death
of imagination. I am waiting for some fool dreamer
with a lyre to call me back from that afterlife.
Ross White is the director of Bull City Press, an independent publisher of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. He is the author of Charm Offensive, winner of the Sexton Prize for Poetry, and three chapbooks: How We Came Upon the Colony, The Polite Society, and Valley of Want. His poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, New England Review, Ploughshares, Poetry Daily, Tin House, and The Southern Review, among others. He is Director of Creative Writing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and co-hosts The Chapbook, a podcast devoted to tiny, delightful things.