Never forget there is poetry in dirt in greens, in beets, especially in rutabagas. Three-dollar-a-bag spinach, you are a symphony of compost with which an old man’s teeth are smitten; Rosemary sprig, beneath all your flavor you are the staff-lines of a madrigal written in loving anticipation of the mason jars, weighed down with water where you will grow and swell and bud and spread out strong purple flowers which elate that you are part of a song which sings every year a little louder.
My beautiful, daredevil vegetables, This coming September, I will miss you dearly. I will be days of travel away from your world of roots, of mist, of six-in-the-morning-before-classes tonic of rain which saturates my skin so good I’m surprised when I shake the dirt from the leeks all over my bare feet, that you don’t crop up green & white from between my toes, that my arms don’t grow heavy with peppers after they cake with jalapeno & bell seeds from all the half-rotten miracles to whom I have given baptism in shallow plastic tubs of water floating like elations of fire in the grayness of the morning.
Know how to tell if a pepper’s rotten? Wash it & shake it & if you can hear the water swishing inside, if you can make a maraca of its innards, then give it back to the dirt.
This is the wisdom of peppers: when you grow soft when you have been chosen & plucked, & washed & thoroughly loved & shaken,
when you have called out like fire beside your brothers in a basin,
lay down in the compost the kindly compost, & listen, just listen, (there will be nothing left to do but listen)