To Jamyla Bolden of Ferguson, Missouri

Fifty years before you did your homework

in Ferguson

we did our homework in Ferguson, thinking life was

fair.

If we didn’t do our homework we might get a U—

Unsatisfactory.

Your dad says you didn’t even get to see the rest of the world yet.

I’ve seen too much of the world and don’t know

how to absorb this—a girl shot through a wall—

U! U! U!

I’d give you some of my years if I could—

you should not have died that night—

there was absolutely no reason for you to die.

I’d like to be standing in a sprinkler with you,

the way we used to do, kids before air-conditioning,

safe with our friends in the drenching of cool,

safe with our shrieks, summer shorts, and happy hair.

Where can we go without thinking of you now?

Did you know there was a time Ferguson

was all a farm?

It fed St. Louis . . . giant meadows of corn,

sweet potatoes,

laden blackberry bushes, perfect tomatoes in crates,

and everything was shovels and hoes, and each life,

even the little tendril of a vine, mattered,

and you did your homework and got an S for Satisfactory, Super,

instead of the S of Sorrow

now stamped on our hands.