The Smell of Napalm in the Morning
June 6 2026
Weeds push up through the cracks,
buckle concrete
and over-shadow the grass.
The dandelion
on your average suburban lawn
and bordering the driveway
is a stoic survivor,
too sturdy to stop
too strong to kill.
They are like the hard men
who go to war on our behalf,
and do unthinkable things
we’d rather not know about.
While the orchids write poetry,
wallflowers stay at home,
and hothouse plants grow fast;
but their long slender stems
are weak and pale
and bend easily under the weight.
They are the boot camp rejects
and conscientious objectors
who stay in their cushy jobs
at Dow chemical
pushing pencils
in some grey office cubicle.
Or study philosophy
normative ethics
introductory Zen,
and join in campus protests
against the war.
Meanwhile, the lawn looks terrible,
an embarrassment
for all the neighbours to see.
You can bomb it with chemicals
drop napalm like hell
or pave it over with concrete.
You can subvert language
and redefine your terms,
where war becomes peace
freedom slavery
and ignorance strength.
Because truth, as we know
is the first casualty,
and words are malleable
— so they’re now wildflowers
and the garden intentional.
Or you can sue for peace
and learn to love the weeds,
or at least
live and let live.
In the first stanza, I was thinking of a quote often (probably incorrectly) attributed to George Orwell:
“People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.” This is what led me to the martial metaphor that ended up running through the rest of the poem. Where my poems go is far more a result of serendipity than intention."
The lines war is peace / freedom slavery / and ignorance strength are an homage to Orwell as well. Although really, the designation of “weed” is rather arbitrary, and as much a function of aesthetics as anything. So any redefinition isn’t so much untruthful as a shift in perspective. Perhaps we should be admiring their strength rather than reviling their persistence and fecundity! Learn to live and let live, as it were. (Detached acceptance. Ahhh . . . if only I was Zen enough for that!)
In the film Apocalypse Now, Robert Duvall’s character Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore famously says: “Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn’t find one of ’em, not one stinkin’ dink body. The smell, you know, the gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like… victory.”
My title is but a pale imitation!
Between dandelion and orchid, I’m afraid I’m the hothouse flower.

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