The Yellow Palm

As I made my way down Palestine Street

I watched a funeral pass

all the women waving lilac stems

around a coffin made of glass

and the face of the man who lay within

who had breathed a poison gas.

As I made my way down Palestine Street

I heard the call to prayer

and I stopped at the door of the golden mosque

to watch the faithful there

but there was blood on the walls and the muezzin’s eyes

were wild with his despair.

As I made my way down Palestine Street

I met two blind beggars

and into their hands I pressed my hands

with a hundred black dinars;

and their salutes were those of the Imperial Guard

in the Mother of all Wars.

As I made my way down Palestine Street

I smelled the wide Tigris,

the river smell that lifts the air

in a city such as this;

but down on my head fell the barbarian sun

that knows no armistice.

As I made my way down Palestine Street

I saw a Cruise missile,

a slow and silver caravan

on its slow and silver mile,

and a beggar child turned up his face

and blessed it with a smile.

As I made my way down Palestine Street

under the yellow palms

I saw their branches hung with yellow dates

all sweeter than salaams,

and when that same child reached up to touch,

the fruit fell in his arms.

by Robert Minhinnick