Explore UAB

Gregory Pardlo

BPR 52 | 2025

Rwandan State radio said cut down
the tall trees. Listeners heard kill
your Tutsi neighbor.

Dog whistles, dangerous as poetry.
When someone says something like
Trees that grow taller

than the forest will be trimmed by the gale,
they are offering the terms
of your surrender.

500s, BCE, Tarquin the Proud
found his boy busy playing
tee-ball with seed heads

where their garden grew the tallest poppies,
and taught him that, one day he’d
have to lop the heads

of men from whose seed insurrection might
flower. Jump cut, poppies flush
London Tower’s moat

ruddy in remembrance of England’s blood
shed since the Opium Wars
when Brits by lethal

persuasion peddled addiction for all
the tea in China. The drug
to start with and stay

with, Purdue Pharma called OxyContin,
at once slogan and decree.
The bitter end of

palliative care assured as millions
like my dad lined up to meet
their makers thumbing

morphine drips like jumpy kids with click-pens.
’Merican justice hums kill
them before they grow,

and poisons their terroir of voting wards,
school board and precincts, and treats
blooms as invasive

products of graft. Playing the suburban
dads, Israel colonels claim
they’re “moving the lawn.”


From Spectral Evidence (2024), Alfred A. Knopf