Prophet leaning on my desk
 you utter in an undertone
 story of sister, brother
 dead their children adrift on
 foreign shores. And you
 as foreign here.
 Fluorescent lights x-ray your
 hollow cheeks, expose your
 insufficient coat, you
 senior brother to the mail
 that begs for food, school,
 shelter, midnight wages
 you work and wish to give.
 You tell how brothers plant
 four acres and harvest
 "maybe this much" maize,
 a briefcase full, your tattered one
 Our mingling tears remind
 your pain to represent
 a people's eating seed corn
 to survive today.
Evelyn Mattern was a member of the Sisters for Christian Community and worked as a lobbyist and organizer for the North Carolina Council of Churches when this poem appeared.
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