Parchman Farm Chain Gang, Sunflower County Mississippi, 1911
How long since my left foot has known a day 
    It did not spend drug along by your right? Since the first 
Rust-iron rattlers made fields of cattails kneel, fronds 
    Curdling like browlines in brutal heat? I forget 
My name, its sins, when I march behind you. I know nothing 
    Of before. Nothing but your nape, its tributary of creases; 
But your gait, pressing smooth miles of streetside weeds. 
    What else can a lonesome roadboy do but look 
At the one to his front: you, with keloid scars inside 
    Even your ears, you with long lashes that, when blinked, 
Seem heavier than these chains, all the men they carry. 
    What I wouldn’t give to see your eyes open again 
After that brief, merciful closing. What I don’t have 
    to give. What I know, if I did, I would. 
Copyright © 2023 by Ariana Benson. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on February 8, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.