Poem of the Day
1981
By Asiya Wadud
in a world the orange sun resets
in a world the orange sun resets
We are a nice family.
My sister Brindille, the first-born, used to be married. She had an hourglass which indicated the time when the water of the ocean would reach a secret point on the hill.
Fifteen or twenty more dollars a night,
They could enact this solemn start
On the Grand Canal, if just in a garret
But having braked all the way to the floor of the valley
it dawned on us the slope we’d have to climb
and it was night, you on the back of my bike
We trusted no one so he came
along that first dinner and felt
or inferred the pile under footfalls
There’s nothing on earth like an accident
to put you in touch with time—time then speaks
in all but words, your mother tongue, it croons
These girls riding bareback on their palominos down the slopes
what do they know, I thought
Montaigne was right, without the body’s meddling love
is more thrilling.
Yet from the start in elementary what she did
The dwarf maple caught my attention
in an ominous way, its purple,
its deep purple leaves shredded gloves
Somewhere between silversmith and potter
he demonstrated how he works, with his wheel
pulling the material in and shaving it away into a hole in the center
I sensed you were about to say
Do you know how much I’ve loved you and I said, Oddly yes
but have been baffled as to why