Let y equal any number of fathers.
Let x equal the numberless planets.
Let y minus x equal long nights of fog
and let x plus y equal hydra & incubus.
If y is > x, why do all my convictions gape?
If x is > y, does “father” just mean nightcap?
When x ÷ y, we set sail on a windjammer.
When y ÷ x, watch for the banshee, the jinn.
Or let x be replaced by a midsummer night
and y by—well, you can never replace y but
by morning y will lollygag near half-moons:
Odysseus sailing to Ithaca, mildew as it rots.
And a b is no mere theory of relativity: it is
helter-skelter materfamilias, Ma Barker, and
Rebekkah, the mother who deceived. Not
Sarah who couldn’t conceive nor the Mother
of all of Nature: the black tern, the kittiwake;
plants ornamental, baroque; the cumulous,
the nebulosus; and yet, mother-of-pearl and
ice-cold, tiger’s-eye and monkey in the middle.
Let’s say a b is a % of all the love in the world
or synonymous with do you love me now that
I can dance? Let’s agree that a is the salsa or
paso doble and b is always always the beguine.
Copyright © 2021 by Lynne Thompson. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 1, 2021, by the Academy of American Poets.
but love does not, Menelle Sebastien.
Of all the afflictions
& luck,
all the sums & paradoxes,
& gravitons that add up
to more minus
than plus,
I promise that love
is often as inconsiderate as it is just
because actual love,
I imagine,
is a wave function
that isn’t restricted
to being
in any one place
at one time.
No, love must
be a superposition
with a measurement problem,
but don’t worry,
I won’t get into alternative
realities & how a single judgement
from one can so easily
dissolve
whom,
or what,
she’s sizing up— & yet,
when experts speak of capturing
vastness at such a small scale,
I can only see the passenger
pigeon
flitting into living
sequoia trees,
& every blue whale
sinking into the great
barrier
reef
& all the threats each are facing,
all these gigantic things
that beat
within the size
of a subatomic being
that is the proton,
which is not fundamental
as love
ought to be—
& maybe it does all
add up
to a single hush.
Like how we try to escape
what makes us human by trying
to make sense of what made us
human.
These days,
when I think on the proton,
I only observe love
as entanglement
in which we bias & sway & touch
over great,
great
distances.
But like I said,
I won’t get into it
like the quark’s fate
& all the possible quantum trickery
out there,
lying in wait.
I don’t believe hope dies
just because old measurements got it
wrong & there are no secret lives
between protons & muons
that cause the former to change
in size,
silencing all the music
that drives us
toward mystery
rather than discovery.
Maybe just thank
electronic hydrogen,
since, for now, there’s an answer,
even if it feels like a dead end—
because I’d bet everything,
that at least something began
over this: jounce,
butterfly & cower ::
over & oeuvre,
greedy, hunger,
& sour—
until aching
each other’s spoils,
stripping bare
their delicate
& deadly
creaking
coils—
Copyright © 2020 by Rosebud Ben-Oni. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on September 24, 2020, by the Academy of American Poets.
1
Wyh do we udnersntad a txet eevn fi the letetrs
aer in dsiordre
*
The letter A
like a membrane
melliferous the animal flesh
bread baking butchery
Alphabet of blood and ash
Litanie incantation
from the back part of her throat
salt for the stew salt
for the bread
Sings the poet maudite
When I in my youth
strolled in a blue wool dress
I strolled in a circle
of blue
2
The reading brain the eyes moving constantly
while reading
*
The letter B
when black letters of fire
patterns of animus across
the landscape
The place in the distance
Where the air
smells of poisoned rain
take one step after
the other
Where you do not want to go
An amalgam of words
in sequential order here where
you walk ahead stop
raise your eyes
3
We identify only ten or twelve letters quick jumps
three or four letters left and seven or eight letters right
*
The letter C circles
zigzags animates the plaster
death cast a solitary
workwoman then
From the back part of her throat
When I in my youth in a blue wool dress
I strolled among maidens monks
and birds I strolled in wind
cold and heat
Across green volcanic hills
There In shadows haze smoke
in three dimensional space
piles of charred human
and animal bones
4
The history of the neurology of reading
the existence of a visual center
*
The letter D whispered
in the dismal quarter where
absence of a picture the green
volcanic hills
Grain grape bread wine
The story of the shepherdess
staged and scripted sub-plots there
in a bucolic setting our lady grows
out of a mound of dirt
Her rose-bud mouth a crooked line
A breast vein as thick as a finger
the wedding feast bread and meat
yellow sulfurous a plume
of smoke
5
Some written words lit up or hidden among
geometric forms
*
The letter E
elaborate the graphic design
chasms and fissures
in the earth
Our lady grows out of rotting meat
Sings the poet maudite
I in my youth concealed and disguised
walked in three dimensional
space
Heat cold wind water
Data science
pain fear phobia multimedia
exhibitions photographic art illustrations
the ritual of baking bread
6
Yeast spores are ubiquitous in air and on
the surface of grain
*
The letter F
the preserved body rotates forms
sweet bacteria then the skin
of the fingertips
Chemical molecular where
In a circle they joined hands
ruiners and destroyers engulf and consume
victims and executioners ooze out
the urge
Staged and scripted sub-plots
Genesis to revelation
in elaborate letters shift twist and slant
disease famine torture war
earth air fire water
7
Everything begins in the retina
ten years of research on the reading brain
*
The letter G a graphic design
sight touch listen the sound
of grinding corn the smell
of bread baking
Then she brews tea over a fire
There in reddish violet light
violet light a jagged black line zigzags
a graphic design the head covered
with a hood
identity unknown tree rope grain
The air smells of smoked meat
his mouth waters taste buds pulsate
from a gap a fissure
a flow of hormonal forces
Copyright © 2017 by Rochelle Owens. This poem originally appeared in Jacket 2. Used with permission of the author.
“Cerebral Cortex”
8
Begin to understand
the nature of the leavening process
*
The letter H
catches in the throat then she steps
backwards and flings
a handful of earth beyond the edges
Of a page you hear a hollow sound
The dry external covering
of an ear of corn then stepping forwards
she scatters letters cut out from
the skull spine bones
The form of a human body
When I in my youth
in a blue wool dress I strolled
in a circle of blue
sings the poet Maudite
9
The cerebral cortex a sliver of brain
barely thicker than a credit card
*
The letter I vertical
under an occult sky once upon
a time I sat cross-legged
in the crotch of a tree
Grape wine grain bread
From roots of plants
that bear the grain in darkness
light heat cold focus on
a common scene
Chasms in the fissured earth
The story of the baker
a set of skills in sequential order
the finished loaf A to Z
in place and space
10
Recognize in some dozens of milliseconds
a written word
*
The letter J the shape
of a hook and on the hook
the butcher’s coat
wind heat cold drought
Blood and mud flows out
of the right sleeve
One animal
gut head and tail measure
body length jaws claws
diameters of holes
The zones of inclusion exclusion
Salt for the stew salt for the bread
once upon a time my mother
was sold from me when I
could but crawl
11
Dispatches from the frontiers
of neuroscience
*
The letter K stands apart
like a barley plant
in three dimensional space
the dry external covering
A snarl of fibrous hairs
Drifting in circles
wind heat cold drought
and dead white the barley plant
cut down
Deboned and buried
Then the reading brain
follows one letter after another
beyond the edges
of a page
One millionth one millionth of a second
an episode
Copyright © 2017 by Rochelle Owens. This poem originally appeared in Jacket 2. Used with permission of the author.
On your Mark, one first O/riginal Form; Get set, a second
angular Segment; Go—the next step, a Rule replacing
each straight side in the first by the second; if I take
a box and for each side of that box substitute a cone
or peak, to make a kind of star—then do again
what I did before: take the star-box
and where I find a straight-line replace it
with a peak, to make a starrier star, nesting the shape
even deeper in the figure, re-placing
peaks to make a Star-in-the-Box! Or, a Diamond-heart-
Star at every level (a shape self-similar); a shape
of extreme complication, in only a few—in five—
iterations, it already reads as texture and is rapidly
sinking as it plummets, repeating, into bonded
lock, where photons mediate, shunting between
heavy center, vibrant orbit. Or deeper, look. No,
look, a quantum leap: the burst box—the born star—is re-
emerging on the line, on the line or/and . . . . Repeat:
From How the Universe is Made. Copyright © 2019 by Stephanie Strickland. Used with the permission of The Permissions Company, Inc., on behalf of Ahsahta Press.