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Poem-a-day

Camay International

I had tasted the pork pickle he had transported trussed 
up in layers of plastic and newspaper pages. My mother stripped 
layer after layer, prying away pieces of words that stuck 
to the jar as though closing around an open wound. 
We knew his wife was a woman with hands of a deity. 
My mother had saved the pickle for us. You cannot buy this 
with money, she said. We blessed the hands that made it, 
the unknown wife of the man I did not know then. 
When I did finally ask him for his name, twenty-five years later, 
he described the villages his parents were born in. He paused 
to correct himself, adjusting his memory, in a follow-up message
on WhatsApp. His name: the name of all those who came before 
him in the villages across Dege, Nangchen, Zurmang. 
There are many Chemes he said, even among us. I know 
what he means by “us.” It’s not the same as the “us” he describes
in an interview a week later with a historian. The intimacies of us. 
What’s lost, what’s recovered, what we cross daily to sing. I recall,
in return my mother sent scented soap for his wife. The fragrance 
of distant gardens; red rose, gardenia. She turned the world 
in her palm. International. Classic. Red rose.

Copyright © 2025 by Tsering Wangmo Dhompa. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on October 13, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.

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Tsering Wangmo Dhompa

Tsering Wangmo Dhompa
Photo credit: Rom Srinivasan
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About Poem-a-Day

Poem-a-Day is the original and only daily digital poetry series featuring over 250 new, previously unpublished poems by today’s talented poets each year. Randall Mann is the Guest Editor of August. Read or listen to a Q&A with Mann about his curatorial process, and learn more about the 2025 Guest Editors. Support Poem-a-Day.  

If you have any questions about Poem-a-Day, visit our Poem-a-Day FAQ.

Previous Poems

Title Author Date
When I Consider How My Light Is Spent John Milton
An October Garden Christina Rossetti
Ribber Come-Do’n Claude McKay
In a Breath Carl Sandburg
The Door into Darkness Kevin Killian
Morning Song Sylvia Plath
I know crips live here Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha
When George was King Emily Pauline Johnson
Angel Supporting St. Sebastian Robin Becker
Calculation Josephine Miles

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