Every Road

Every road should come to this end:

A place called home.

When you don’t have one

the expanse of sky is your roof,

the vast fields of green your living room.

Every city, your city.

When you speak, you speak for the country.

In the wrinkled faces and the sun-scarred eyes,

mother earth calls us to fury.

Every child without a home

is everyone’s child.

The daily murders go unanswered:

To die of cold in sunny California.

To starve in New York City,

the restaurant capital of the world.

To have no coat on the Broadway of coats.

The crimes pile up as high as the mountains

of grain that are warehoused and stored away

from those who need it.

A mother’s child is taken away for neglect

because she can’t pay rent and eat at the same time.

Children born of a labor of love are condemned

for the lack of labor.

Every road should come to this end.

A place called home.