Recycling Vigilante

by Mima Wright
Poetry
For Dorothy and all the ordinary people
who do extraordinary things


Daybreak over the Fresno City College grounds.
Branches of the centennial trees wind-dancing.
A band of Seven-up, Coca-cola and Pepsi cans
commences its rhapsody of crushed despair.
Speedy recycling vigilante single-handedly
converts recklessness of aluminum junk
into the scholarship gold of rising hope.

Praise her elderly, diligent hand in a cotton glove,
meticulously mining through our ignorance
and turning dark misfortunes into vivid light.

Her calves of a former marathon runner,
among the rows of packed trash containers,
her rushing feet flying like German rockets.
My sleepy ecological conscience at risk.
I move my head sideways and catch the rays
of the morning star smile hovering above
the quiet anarchy of paper cups and wrappers.

Praise her elderly, diligent hand in a cotton glove,
extended to salute you, even if it is too engaged
sorting the rubbish to notice a casual observer.

Insomnia: the images of miniature old lady in
denim short-alls working alone by the fountain
of Fresno City College pride. The silver forest of
her hair swinging in the rhythm of rustling water.
Her back bent over piles of human lack of care.
A thousand students passing by, the young eyes
absorbing only the world they wish to see.

Praise her elderly, diligent hand in a cotton glove.
It belongs to the mind of a retired English teacher,
an eighty-year-old patron-saint of all volunteers.

Greet and indulge Recycling Vigilante.
Her intellect of giving survival is unforeseen.
She is the nexus between our sense of humanity
and the slavery to text messaging and androids.
That distinct and modest creature is you in a
blueprint of the future. She holds the candle for all.
Praise her elderly, diligent hand in a cotton glove.

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© 2013 Fresno City College—The Review / Ram's Tale is a publication of student writing and artwork from the Humanities and Fine, Performing and Communication Arts Divisions at Fresno City College. Authors retain all rights to their work.