17 Kinds of Hungry

Until around sundown, the surviving
lilies in the yard stay wide open,
like the window of a car passing
on a hot day. No music from the flowers,
but they smell like somebody’s fragrant
soap unwrapped on a dish edged
with daisies. All those smells expressing
themselves haphazardly like a band
trying to tune up. Escape is what I’ve wanted
since I was little, cramped in summertime
Section 8: flowers everywhere,
my bird-legged brother a couple steps
back, my sister book-nosed somewhere
in the radius of us. Just a deciduous minute 
when the blossom of noises
was from my own AM radio & not my thin
stomach. No more backtalks, no more
slapbacks. Just a quick inhale before
I tiptoed out the front door. Unlatch, turn,
run away. Escape, as Indiana bats wheeled
up top, chirping sonorous somethings.
I ran under them & to the bus, past
those long-necked lilies, self-congratulatory
in their exploded colors. Their purples leaned
the way June does, their reds hot as the woman’s
attitude waiting at the bus stop while
the #17 scooted past without picking us up.

Credit

Copyright © 2024 by Adrian Matejka. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 19, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets. 

About this Poem

“Most of my poems begin with an image or some kind of sonic surprise, but this poem began as an episode—a childhood memory of living in Section 8. When I think of that time, I’m reminded of Lucille Clifton’s poem ‘at last we killed the roaches.’ Her ability to distill a particular kind of have-not in lines like ‘the cooking pots were ours again / and we were glad, such cleanliness was grace’ is an inspiration, even if I’ll never be able to write about that time with Clifton’s imagination and dignity.”
—Adrian Matejka