The Farmer plants seeds in his field
and from the dust grow living vines
which, with time and tender care,
produce a lovely patch of pumpkins.
But the locals, jealous of his bounty,
declare the neighborhood is overrun
with too many pumpkins already and
decide to selectively smash and destroy.
“Let’s pull little ones off the vines!”
they yell, and pluck the smallest orbs,
prematurely; throwing them on the
refuse pile, unripe and unwanted.
Then they notice some fully grown
pumpkins that didn’t develop into
perfect specimens – a little lopsided,
warty, or sporting misshapen ridges.
“We cannot stand to look at them!”
Those deemed imperfect pumpkins
are next to be ripped from the vines
and carelessly heaved into the ditch.
Obviously, all worthy pumpkins
must be a rich shade of true orange;
so pumpkins of different shades or
mottled skin must also be tossed out.
By now, pumpkin-smashing fever has
caught the mob in a frenzy of destruction
until they leave only busted bits of shells,
slimy orange guts and the Farmer’s tears.

(Photo and poetry prompt from brian at d’Verse Poets.)
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