The Fields of Mars
By this time in my life,
I had hoped we would be discussing
what flowers will grow best
on the red plains of our next-door neighbor.
Cities would float in the upper atmosphere,
collections of platforms from which
a thousand vehicles could take us anywhere
between the stars.
Now I worry
we instead seek ships
to take us nowhere
as quickly as inhumanly possible.
We squabble these days
over blaming others for algae,
when we once dreamed of shooting that scum
across space to make room
for rootbound residents of earth.
We slash each other
instead of hacking the obstacles
that keep our futures from growing.
No black and blue buds
poke through early spring dust storms
that deposit dirt so rich
it might as well be lethal.
No space stations await us
over the next horizon.
When given the choice—
and even when not awarded so—
I remember the blooms
I hope to see images of
across the fields of Mars
when I think of how low
our species has sunk.
2 thoughts on "The Fields of Mars"
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I like how there is hopefulness even within the pain and anger. The description of what Mars could look like provoking a longing that makes the reader want to strive to make it a reality.
Great political poem.