Advertisement

Potatoes

Los Angeles Times readers submitted their views in verse for a feature dedicated to opinion poetry.
(Anthony Russo / For The Times)
Share

Do you not know we connive against you?

You relegate us to cellars, remote recesses,

leave us to rot without air, among others uprooted —

the stink of onions makes our eyes water.

We were worshipped by Incas. When Antoinette

adorned her hair with our blossoms, demand

for us became insatiable. You think us bland lumpens?

We will rise again. Listen. Once we refused

to come up from the earth and brought down a nation.

We bide our time. We lurk in dark corners, multiplying

our eyes. Our skin thickens against you.

We hiss and spit at your kind from the pan.

The author is a poet and novelist in New York City.

Read more: Opinion poetry by Times readers


Advertisement
Advertisement