Orange

Untitled Document

If I have a gender, let it be a history learned from orange
Freak            Sun Sucker           Queer            Orange Boy

Rumor of 6th grade sunrise, dressed in you I was a child
of unspeakable obsession. Archaic language, Giolureade

Until Margaret Tudor, Queen of Scots. Her lips unlocked
your sarcenet line, my fingers knew taste before the orange

Dared on Norwood apartments, Dutch colonies
hunted man straight into your family crests of orange

Scraped from dust to crown our bruises, warriors we
stared directly into the sun, Tainos dyed in orange

As if we always knew we were history. Amber hardened into gold
tricking mortals, mortals tricking gods asking Was it the fruit or the color?

First, Tibbets’ grove, millions of fruits grafted
instead of born, from two parent orange trees

The key to a philosopher’s stone: Colormen flirting
with volcanos to retrieve your arsenic orpiment

Forever in danger of sliding into another color, I ran
after you, tracing rivers and creeks and streams of citrus

The Washington Navel Orange, a second fruit protruding:
not a twin, nor translation, but a new name every season.

Credit

Copyright © 2025 by Noel Quiñones Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 28, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.

About this Poem

“In The Secret Language of Color, Joann and Arielle Eckstut write, ‘For millennia, orange was a color without an identity. In many languages, it’s one of the very last, if not the last, color named in the rainbow.’ The ghazal holds this expansive history as each couplet names a different orange, a different me, all equal and intertwined.” 
—Noel Quiñones