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You tear our kind away, those pesky weeds                                             that stunt your plump full seeds  - that steal and cause decay. You landed by fortune, fortune of the windy chance - you earned it. What is different is dangerous less valued - not worth a glance. Warm soil in-between your fingers, You have power here in the garden, Pulling and wrenching the stems from home We’re unwanted, not needed Not useful, not beautiful, Not enough,                       but too much.                                      Strong weathered fingers grip our necks, Trampled under steel studded boots, We seep into the soil disappearing, Just like you wanted us to. Suffocating ignored as grassroots, condemned to be always taboo. Weeding is good, you say. Weeding is important. It keeps the garden healthy, comely, presentable. We’re the intruders, thieves! in search for better light. Worn down we grieve. why do you see not our might? A garden improved Standing up I arch my back, rusty and cramped. Tiresome work removing the unwanted. My hands scratched and torn, the limp bodies neatly packed, the garden is reborn. The flora look uniform now no insulting dark stems, only the long strong boughs of rightful King Oak, and no more of them. But a king without his subjects is a peasant. With our loss fades your treasured soil, your sterling root networks anchoring your   flowerbeds of wealth. We are the pests, we stole your soil, so why does it grow grey? You wanted growth I heard you say. You can’t have both. What a nuisance. Us or the decay? So I am a pest, you say? Well, to that I say, we pests always grow. Your tulips and rose corrode, but you reap what you sow. No matter the hate that spits our existence, the sharp teeth of the chainsaw or poisonous pesticide bidding good riddance, we are green, and life sustaining, and we are resistant. The aim is not good riddance, but co-existence.
0
Mar 4, 2021
Mar 4, 2021 at 10:45 AM UTC
Nuisance
You tear our kind away, those pesky weeds                                             that stunt your plump full seeds  - that steal and cause decay. You landed by fortune, fortune of the windy chance - you earned it. What is different is dangerous less valued - not worth a glance. Warm soil in-between your fingers, You have power here in the garden, Pulling and wrenching the stems from home We’re unwanted, not needed Not useful, not beautiful, Not enough,                       but too much.                                      Strong weathered fingers grip our necks, Trampled under steel studded boots, We seep into the soil disappearing, Just like you wanted us to. Suffocating ignored as grassroots, condemned to be always taboo. Weeding is good, you say. Weeding is important. It keeps the garden healthy, comely, presentable. We’re the intruders, thieves! in search for better light. Worn down we grieve. why do you see not our might? A garden improved Standing up I arch my back, rusty and cramped. Tiresome work removing the unwanted. My hands scratched and torn, the limp bodies neatly packed, the garden is reborn. The flora look uniform now no insulting dark stems, only the long strong boughs of rightful King Oak, and no more of them. But a king without his subjects is a peasant. With our loss fades your treasured soil, your sterling root networks anchoring your   flowerbeds of wealth. We are the pests, we stole your soil, so why does it grow grey? You wanted growth I heard you say. You can’t have both. What a nuisance. Us or the decay? So I am a pest, you say? Well, to that I say, we pests always grow. Your tulips and rose corrode, but you reap what you sow. No matter the hate that spits our existence, the sharp teeth of the chainsaw or poisonous pesticide bidding good riddance, we are green, and life sustaining, and we are resistant. The aim is not good riddance, but co-existence.
An allegorical poem on the importance of assimilation of differences rather than separation
Written by
18/F/UK
Mar 4, 2021
Mar 4, 2021 at 10:45 AM UTC
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