“Revolution” poetry by Sarah Chang ’18

cherimoya“Revolution” by Sarah Chang ’18
After “Revolution” by Blas Falconer

Cherimoya trees disperse at the edge
of ruta panamericana, clamor for shadow

under a whitewashed sky. They seem to stand
fierce and proud, filling the spaces

between the scrawling hand of revolutionaries behind them,
leaves heavy and strong. We slept

there, cold moonlight laced with cherimoya and fear.
Here we stand again, it seems,

years later, battalions of sickly sweet fruit dotting
the road, you in your worn-soft moccasins and bead-braided hair,

crooning battle cries and logistics, as if to live
something secretly special, unknown to the rest.

You stand to welcome winds from the east, to greet
at dawn in the hills, chestnut hair breezed to the side,

black eyes ablaze. I’ll stand with you
until there’s nothing left to forget.

This entry was posted in Poetry and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to “Revolution” poetry by Sarah Chang ’18

  1. kkim18 says:

    sick frooty Srah!!

Leave a Reply to schang18 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *