Ars Poetica
A walk through a field carrying my mother’s wounds
The glorious gap in my grandmother’s
teeth The iron swallowing
the wrinkles from my sister’s dress My stubborn
brothers throw their heads back in laughter
I marvel the harvest of their uncombed
kinks A phantom of a father the tremor of his
voice My mother silent exorcist on a good day
The roaches praising the empty of the night
The oven open it’s yawn devours the brittle cold
Winter unyielding it wills to break
My grandmother and her children squatters in an empty
brownstone The passing down of how to thaw the absence
of money We do not count The lessons of growing
up without
Instead—
My great-aunt remembers her mother a master of
bearing joy While cleaning others’ homes how ample humility
runs in the caretaker
When she is forced to forget everything I watch her in a
facility The quiet blink of her eyes a drowning past
she’s unable to tell me When she dies
I visit her home the land expands a restless root
She is buried next to her husband
Who is buried next to her daughter
Who is buried next to her son
Who is not buried next to his nephew who dies
Many years later in utter silence a memory
revives an ancestor Who unearths
itself to marvel the vast and fertile infinite
From Nocturne in Joy (Sundress Publications, 2023) by Tatiana Johnson-Boria. Copyright © 2023 by Tatiana Johnson-Boria. Used with the permission of the publisher.