Mercy, Mercy Me
By John Murillo
Crips, Bloods, and butterflies.
Β Β A sunflower somehow planted
in the alley. Its broken neck.
Β Β Maybe memory is all the home
you get. And rage, where you
Β Β first learn how fragile the axis
upon which everything tilts.
Β Β But to say you've come to terms
with a city that's never loved you
Β Β might be overstating things a bit.
All you know is there was once
Β Β a walk-up where now sits a lot,
vacant, and rats in deep grass
Β Β hide themselves from the day.
That one apartment fire
Β Β set back in '76βone the streets
called arson to collect a claimβ
Β Β could not do, ultimately, what
the city itself did, left to its own dank
Β Β devices, some sixteen years later.
Rebellions, said some. Riots,
Β Β said the rest. In any case, flames;
and the home you knew, ash.
Β Β It's not an actual memory, but
you remember it still: a rust-
βββββββββββββββββββββΒ Β bottomed Datsun handed down,
then stolen. Stripped, recovered,
ββββββββββββββΒ Β and built back from bolts.
Driving away in May. 1992.
βββββββββββββββββββββΒ Β What's left of that life quivers
in the rearviewβthe world on fire,
βββββββββββββββββββββΒ Β and half your head with it.
Copyright Credit: John Murillo, "Mercy, Mercy Me" from Kontemporary Amerikan Poetry. Copyright Β© 2020 by John Murillo. Β Reprinted by permission of Four Way Books, www.fourwaybooks.com.
Source: Kontemporary Amerikan Poetry (Four Way Books, 2020)