Omnicide
By Maurya Simon
And when our children ask,
Why did you do nothing as the world
was dying? what will we tell them?
Will we say, We didn’t know how
sick it was, or admit that We gathered
our rosebuds while we could,
Old Time was still a-flying—?
It’s now the end of everything,
our children will say, go crawl
into your arks and sail off destitute into
your doom, and leave us only
your shadows. And our children
will light candles across seven continents
empty now of lions, kangaroos, ravens,
squirrels, javelinas, pelicans—
devoid of praying mantises, koalas, ants,
cobras, snails, Doberman pinschers, pigs,
vultures, lizards, and alley cats.
Our children will hide in caves with blind
cockroaches, together feeding on the algae
glowing in neon greens and blues
across dolomite and limestone walls.
They’ll leave no pictographs behind,
no sprayed handprints, no artful gods.
Such silence now, they’ll say, this you’ve
bequeathed us, this human indifference.
And we’ll beg them, Survive.
Source: Poetry (October 2020)