People going through
hard times don’t listen
to songs about people
going through hard times,
says my son. Debt, addiction,
chronic bad luck, unemployment—
I’m with you, I say. The only
exception is heartbreak;
when you’re deep in it
you just want a late-night
DJ to spin your pain. The car
radio is playing Jason Isbell
through Wyoming, part of it
in Yellowstone National Park,
home to 500 of the world’s
900 geysers. Mesmerizing
eruptions! Geothermal wonders!
Hot holes and fumaroles!
Last week a Bison
gored a Phoenix woman,
but who knows how close
she got before it charged.
Bison run three times faster
than humans and injure
more people than any animal
in the park—even grizzlies.
In thermal areas the ground
is just a thin crust above
acidic pools, some resembling
milky marbles, others the insides
of celestine geodes reflecting
the sky. Boardwalk signs
all over Yellowstone shout
Dangerous Ground! Potentially
fatal! and despite that—
despite the print of a boy
off-balance, falling through
the surface into a boiling
hot spring, his mouth an O
of fear—despite the warnings
in writing that more than
a dozen people have been
scalded to death here and
hundreds badly burned
or scarred, there are still
the tourons taunting bears,
dipping their fingers
off the side of the Boardwalk
into a gurgling mudpot.
Got a loan out on the truck
but I’m runnin’ out of luck,
sings Isbell, and the parking lots
are packed with license plates
from every state—so many
borrowed RVs taking the curves
too hard, so much rented
bear spray dangling from
carabiners clipped to cargo
short waistbands, and ample
Christianity too: the Jesus
& Therapy t-shirt, the Enjoy
Jesus baseball hat, the all I need
today is a little bit of coffee
and a whole lot of Jesus tote,
Mennonite families with
women in bonnets
hauling toddlers. I want
to tell my son it’s not
shameful to need
something or someone
to help us out of the darkness
when it gets very dark.
Jeff Buckley. Joy Division.
Jesus. Dolly Parton. Even
Delilah and her long
distance dedications
cracking the silence of
every solo backroad
I’ve been driving since
before he was born.
He is sixteen. Does he know
the black hole of loving
and not being loved in return,
the night and its volume?
And the moon—nearly full,
rising over Old Faithful
which erupts on cue
to an appreciative crowd
every ninety-ish minutes.
And the moon, keeping me
insomniac with its light
shining like an interrogation
trick into this cabin
through the crack
between the window
and the blind.
Copyright © 2024 by Erika Meitner. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on March 27, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
Over the past two weeks, please list the items you have lost.
At the present moment, do you know the location & number of your teeth?
(in grams) Please estimate the weight of each of the following: Left lung, half-liver, three fingers on your right hand.
(in miles) Please estimate the distance from the back of your skull to the skin of your eye.
Over the past two weeks, please estimate the number of times you’ve attempted to start a conversation and failed (including, but not limited to: grocery stores, living rooms, when you are alone.)
(in incandescence) How much light passes through you? Is it enough to write a letter?
Pick a letter. Pick a new name.
Can you hear the woman singing?
What was your death’s taxonomy? Where is its kingdom & domain?
How important do you feel to others?
Are you sitting atop the creaking hinges of something only you can see?
Are you certain there is no part of your body that is missing.
Are you certain there is nothing missing at all.
Copyright © 2024 by James Fujinami Moore. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 16, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
Take me back to homesteaders who pronounce poem & perm
The same & know neither take too well watered or weighted down.
To those who teach the difference between wahoos & no-hows
& haints & t’ain’t no body’s beast or business or property no mo’.
To endless back roads, verdant & muddy. To racing waist-deep
In fields of wildflowers & corn stalks as tall as your big brother’s crown
& Verily, I say, & because I say, so it is. To fields of blinding white &
Chiggers & bolls that burrow deep in soil richer & veined & reddened
By all those black, bruised palms’ blood. To never will I pick again. To
Melons & peanuts & as many hogs & heads of cattle as our pennies
& prayers can feed. To knowing when to slaughter & what
To keep. To knowing where to hide the blade, who not to tell.
To Mrs. Mable’s snuff-mucked mouth & her darlin’ Ben, to
Mack & Nellie & they ol’ mule Sally’s slack back breaking wind.
To Sister Lola’s man’s astigmatism, Uncle Willis’ crossed legs
& arms belying memories of a rifle, his right hand unflinching
In salute, winning the Battle of the Bulge I never will. To Miss
Lou Mamie convulsing, then giving up the right for the wrong
Right there, finally, in the choir stand, where Grandpa Roy
& Grandma Noretha keep time at the Hammond & Console,
Ruby-throated tenor & contralto entwined across a space vast
As the two-room shanty where they will make the restless boy
Who will make me, whose hearts stopped ’fo’ I could lay on
They chests & listen. To unsteady as this fraught rhyme reaching,
Reaching, echoing the murmur they gifted him & me, they baby
Boygirl. Take me back to the original question, which enters
This room’s crooked lines long before you with your morning
Coffee or fresh blend of tinctures, teas or spirits: What must
I do to be saved from myself now? What you got to take away
This plague’s unyielding ache? I’m nobody’s savior, Nicodemus, but
Come here. Hear them. In my dreams, these & a few others await:
Always alive, hear them rocking a stain-glassed house of pews,
Blues creaking in sync, brows & arms aloft, hands caressing
Oaken divets on the quaking boards’ floors & collicky babies’
Backs in brokenhearted girls’ arms & laps. Let us kneel, faces flat,
Fingers flexed, nostrils becking Pine-Sol to cleanse every crevice
It can reach, backs arched, conjuring bolts of holy heat
No unnatural flesh, unmoved, can stand. Come on, Jesus
Allah Amma. Anyone Listening? Take us down, down into
These plantations’ mire, believing in ussin the only way beyond through
To ours. There, Thomas’ dubious gaze will mirror mine, help us
Cross in a calm time. Rest our thorny sides in its briar patch, thatch
A home from its scrapyards’ booty, undulate real proper like, loose
Our selves in this shifty baldachin’s ready sway. I’ll go, I cried all
Those years ago. Send me. But I’m so tired, all cried out, so take
Me back to this nowhere town, where we can lay our burdens down.
Copyright © 2024 by L. Lamar Wilson. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 18, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
What seeps in me from weeks of rain
making me forget
the life-give part in water.
The world this morning
reminds me too much
of my insides that night I almost
abandoned the balcony.
Three pages deep of furious
language. Scratching
worry into my journal
before I can say, please,
let me
stop. Notice,
on the outside table
this jagged bouquet:
tobacco seeds, dried,
still attached to the cut
few inches of their last-year stalks,
wrinkled fire
in a mini vase. It doesn’t look much
like promise, but it is.
Copyright © 2024 by Hari Alluri. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on May 1, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
Copyright © 2024 by Purvi Shah. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on June 12, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
We painted dawn into midnight
Out of cement ceilings
we made skylights
From gravel, we crafted fine and delicate chandeliers
hung them with fishing line
so they appeared to float in midair
We turned copper piping into rings
Venus circling our fingers
the oxidation turned our digits green
our limbs transforming
into ferns and orchids
We breathed and our condensation
Created clouds
Our tears fed the sea
We prayed to all the living things
We sat in silence with the trees
Our feet rooting into the ground
To touch the highest energy
The evergreens and us
We breathed in tandem
And inside our lungs
Sprung a forest of veins
Mimicking their cousins’ limbs
We sprouted two intricate flowers
In our minds
For the left and right hemispheres
And we hung our thoughts there
Believing that the petals would keep them safely tucked away
We recognized ourselves
Didn’t need mirrors to see our likeness
Even the dirt felt like us
The sand, our bones in a trillion pieces
We walked atop these beaches
Sinking in, their legacy holding us
There was silence
and we were not afraid
There was peace
And we were not anxious
There was a world
We did not conquer
Copyright © 2024 by Desdamona. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on August 8, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.