Jatropha cardiophylla
Limberbush
I
must have passed by a hundred times and not noticed 
these
spindly twigs, drought and cold deciduous, 
among
the desert's scraggle… so what 
if
I know baskets were made by the Seri people 
the
splints sewn into a star 
the
blood color of these branches 
or
that Jatropha cardiophylla lives in colonies 
spread
by underground runners and that its sap 
stains
the fingers red or that it bears a single female flower, 
a
three seeded fruit? Knowledge 
is
not the encounter with the thing itself, 
so
at the margins of the the monsoon season, 
caught
in a basket of words, 
I
am stuck on the limberbush, searching 
for
its white to pale yellow blooms, to see 
knowingly this one small life
like
all the nondescript small creatures, 
including
human beings 
that
the eyes have to open to find, so 
I
can bow to it and acknowledge 
its
small loves opening the shining 
heart-shaped
leaves with their crenellated margins 
and
red petioles . . .how radiant 
is
the ordinary, overlooked, the never-seen 
when
branches that seem dead or stricken 
leaf
and flower in the rain. 
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