
         Heartland
    It’s hard to do justice to the Missouri
    corn fields that stand everywhere and forever
    their endless rows of sturdy, erect stalks
    whispering sweet corny nothings in our collective ear.
    This simple plant that fed our emerging species
    -saved it really with its eagerness to flourish-
    left time for the growth of art and music
    governments and corruption
    and sustains us still,
    will be there when all else fails.
    It’s hard to do justice to the insistent
    Missouri crickets,
    -or are they grasshoppers and cicadas-
    that incessantly holler and screech
    their urgent warnings, predictions,
    advice, and pleadings
    whether we heed them or not.
    And the moisture!
    Heavy veils of dampness
    cocooning all the rest of it,
    urging the grasses to grow
    as thick and rich as carpet,
    blades as wide as a thumb,
    roots a tangled, jumbled mess.
    A kernel of himself knowing
    just how and where to do it,
    my city-loving son has taken himself
    to this land of corn
    and crickets and watery air
    to grow.
    It’s hard to do justice to my feelings of
    gratitude and amazement
    that he has chosen a place of palpable growth
    - a heartland –
    to sustain himself
    to heed his own warnings
    to grow tall and thick and sturdy
    to root himself in his own tangled, jumbled mes     s.
poem copyright 2009 Ruth Hudgens
photo copyright 2009 BRowland
 
 
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