So everything has changed.
So history has cut a wide swath
in your mind, has made
the insides of the frame—
the distant pear trees, the off-white
sky—heavy with implication.
So you can't look at it again
without thinking how
its significance
has to do with the artist who,
as a child, was brought to a river & told
his mother has drowned.
Has to do with him,
a witness to the instant
her body is fished out of the dark
by pulley, by counterweight,
working together like some grim wrist
to raise her, carefully
by the waist,
her off-white nightgown, soaked,
clinging to her face.
Has to do with mother
as handkerchief being lifted,
as exposed bone.
Mother, the question mark
at the center of his life
usurped by other questions like
Weren't there signs Something
unusual Something
you should've seen coming
son You should've warned someone.
The first time I understood
the uselessness of marriage
my mother led me by the hand, locked
me in the bathroom, hoping
I wouldn't hear them fight.
Then, later,
us in front of our screen door
bearing a small black duffle bag
stuffed with clothes,
waiting for the storm to stop,
waiting for what
felt like hours. There,
her eyes
not watering, not breaking,
but looking,
as she took one step
beyond the awning
to let the rain come,
to let it wash her face.
Then me, reaching for her
wrist, asking
Can we go back in?
So is that what it is,
what he's trying to answer
sifting the bottom of the palette,
the frame, kicking up river
rocks & algae & pear trees
& history—
searching for meaning
as if meaning could be
wrung out?
But of what?
The nightgown? The pear trees? Their bodies
peering out at us as if being
photographed, as if seeing
their reflections on the surface of a river
before stepping in.
So what was he thinking
(here, right here)
when he raised his wrist to drape
the whites, the greys,
to hide the now
phantom face?
What was she thinking?
Was there hesitation?
Was there a moment
he imagined removing it,
raising it,
placing gold coins
over the voids
where her mouth & eyes
would be?
-
Issue 68
-
Editor's Note
-
POETRY
- J. Mae Barizo
- Aziza Barnes
- Stephen J Boyer
- Wo Chan
- Cathy Linh Che
- Rio Cortez
- Maxe Crandall
- Justine el-Khazen
- Jessica Rae Elsaesser
- Rachel Eliza Griffiths
- Monica Hand
- Ricardo Hernandez
- Paul Hlava
- Rosamond S. King
- Esther Lin
- Andriniki Mattis
- Vikas K. Menon
- Timothy Ree
- Danniel Schoonebeek
- Andrew Seguin
- Xena S Semjonova
- Vincent Toro
- Paul Tran
- Aldrin Valdez
- Jeannie Vanasco
- Tishon Woolcock
- Yanyi
- Elizabeth Zuba