• Vol. 10
  • Chapter 05

Cornucopia

In memory of Eduardo Galeano

How many years ago did I ask her this:
is love only truly expressed through action?
I was then a monkey. She was a hound,

not the least bit inclined to agree with me,
rather talking of mercy, then of charity,
how such things fall naturally from above,

quite unwilled—yet here I can find no crab,
no lobster dished up on tilting plates,
no cooked ham, baskets of blackberries,

red- or black-currants, no red and white grapes
with the bloom, untouched, still upon them,
but piles of tins of tuna chunks in oil,

pasta pre-wrapped in plastic, the red caps
of peanut butter jars, stacked jars of jam.
She’s the hound still. I am yet the monkey,

crying ‘solidarity’ to her shower of mercy
(she bares her teeth, scratches her rump).
I say: I’ve lots to learn from other people,

so it’s good that hundreds of hungry faces
queue each week outside these doors,
that the monkey’s mission—as for teachers,

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Cornucopia

as for poets—is to work towards a world
in which they no longer need to exist:
the want of food, or love, or neighbourliness.

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