Poem of the Day
1981
By Asiya Wadud
in a world the orange sun resets
in a world the orange sun resets
The young, having risen early, had gone,
Some, with excursions, beyond the bay-mouth,
Some toward lakes, a fragile reflected sun.
Evasive souls, of whom the wise lose track,
Die in each night, who, with their day-tongues, sift
The waking-taste of manna or of blood:
riding in the pick-up
between the father and the son
I hardly know the older
Crack of a starting-pistol. Jean Jaurès
dies in a wine-puddle. Who or what stares
through the café-window créped in powder-smoke?
Fantastic to be Lowry by proxy,
Confabulating him; to stand tongue-tied
In awe of yourself; to hold epoxy-
Knowing the dead, and how some are disposed,
Subdued under rubble, water, sand-graves,
In clenched cinders, not yielding their abused
I stand before this landscape at dusk
jacklighted, caught in the high beams,
shocked into stillness, rapt, incapable
Even now I do not understand
the 5pat and hissed and murmured words
strangled out of throats in distant cells;
… the moon comes up in her
secondness, left edge not
filled in quite, the abject not filled in quite
but trying …
The gravestone-looking slab donated to the college
for instructing students about light and dark
and the rotation of the world stands solemnly