I am the deer Large shimmering eyes and slender limbs A fawn with spots still on Like the baby’s breath of the meadow in which I lay Mocha fur shining in the morning sunlight Face wet with dew from the chill of night
I am the deer Mangled on the side of the road Intestines on display for the vultures above Legs twisted into a sick jigsaw puzzle Killed by the man who worries about the machine And drives away with apathy unwavering
I am the woman Long, toned legs Striding down a city sidewalk, wind in her hair A statue, a monolith, an icon Like a being carved from polished marble from the raw earth A face of beauty incarnate
I am the woman A dismembered body with DNA foreign to herself Lying in a lake, the soil, a vat of oil The threads of clothing cut too short like Fate’s own hemline Killed by the man and his ego who worries if blood washes out And walks away with apathy unwavering
It is a tragedy as old as time That Mother Nature birthed daughters