—after The Centennial Banyan at Bayside Market Place in Miami-Dade County
The Banyan at Bayside
stands sentry
over the city it watches.
Nourished by a century
of sea breeze and salt brine,
Miami sidewalks soften
beneath its crown. Leaf knit
canopy so grand,
we have forgotten
it began as a seed
that fell from the beak
of a migrant bird
fleeing its origins
in search of sunshine,
a warmer abode,
the dream of a home
gathered from fronds
and sticks, from detritus,
hope alone,
fueling its wings
spurring it on.
This is how
a county grows—
one kernel at a time.
The seedling begets the sprout,
the sprout begets the sapling,
the sapling digs in and strives
for light, for height,
for the strength required
to anchor itself, to grow
into a trunk that will
extend its branches
toward us all,
verdant arms laden
with blossoms, with berries,
with mangos, with flowers
for our tables, our altars,
the offerings we cast
into our river, our ocean,
for the dirt-warmed hands
of the gardener who knows
to prune only
what can be transplanted,
what can be regrown
from the cutting,
a scion strong enough
to root itself within
a new spot
and grow in soil
studded with coral
and limestone,
wanting only to offer
itself, to bloom
again, once more
From Through the Lens: Ekphrastic Poems (Texas Review Press, 2026) by Caridad Moro-Gronlier. Used with the permission of The Permissions Company, LLC on behalf of Texas Review Press.