Tag: Small Mercies

  • Small Mercies


    Close-up of brittlebush in a desert wash with yellow blooms and drifting seed heads, accompanying a desert poem by Iris Lennox.
    I crouch beside a dusty wall
    where last season’s brittlebush
    has split open in the heat.

    The seed heads crumble easily
    between my fingers.

    Hundreds loosen at once—

    thin husks,
    needle-fine,
    the color of clay
    after rain trips across
    this foreign land.

    The desert keeps everything small.

    Small leaves.
    Small flowers.
    Small mercies.

    Even the seeds know
    not to ask for too much water.

    Wind moves through creosote
    carrying that sharp green smell
    released after stormlight.

    I gather the seeds carefully
    into a small red handkerchief
    while gravel presses through
    the knees of my jeans.

    Nearby,
    a barrel cactus
    leans sunlight back into the air.

    A curve of lizard tracks
    crosses the sand
    then disappears beneath stone.

    I walk farther into the wash
    where runoff carved narrow channels
    through the earth last monsoon season.

    This is where things take root.

    Not at the top
    where the ground hardens clean and proud,

    but lower—

    where floodwater leaves behind
    what it carried.

    I press the seeds
    into damp pockets of soil
    hidden beneath mesquite shade.

    One handful here.

    Another farther down
    where the sand still holds
    last night’s coolness.

    The wind lifts again.

    One seed catches briefly
    against my wrist.

    Another disappears immediately
    into open country.

    For weeks
    nothing changes.

    Heat gathers.

    Light whitens the stones.

    Cicadas grind the afternoons open.

    Then one morning—

    green.

    So small at first
    I nearly miss it.

    Two leaves lifting
    through grit.

    Then more.

    The land begins filling slowly
    with yellow blooms
    no larger than coins.

    Bees arrive in straight lines
    and swirls.

    Then hummingbirds.

    Then a woman
    walking her old shepherd
    stops beside the flowers
    and smiles at a stranger
    crossing the trail.

    —Iris Lennox