Inside me, a family
“To walk in the world is to find oneself in a body without papers, not a citizen of anything but breath.”
—Kazim Ali, Silver Road
born from small
waters. Each night,
I look for paper
to feed this first litter
from a slow continent.
New trappers buy
their fetters and hooks,
dreaming of new skin
to drape. In the sky, a wound
like river, opening up again
to bird. Neighborhood pushes
against seams, dislikes
a newcomer. This linked
to history and forgetting—
a new gray house like a weed.
A monument rises past the window. We sit and drink twice-steeped tea.
Copyright © 2021 by Ching-In Chen. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on November 5, 2021, by the Academy of American Poets.