End of June: I study my stretched skin
where blue veins wind like rivers
about to leap their banks,
try to keep birds from figs
plumping thick with syrup.
Tarmac fissures and buckles
with heat, a peach splits
from the weight of a gust.
Far from here streets fill
with crowds shouting, batons cracking.
The death of a smiling woman on a daylit
street replays on little screens.
This is the world we'll give him.
Or rather, this is the world
he'll get.
-
Issue 54
-
Editor's Note
-
Poetry
-
Fiction
-
Book Review
- David Rigsbee reviews Blue Rust
by Joseph Millar
- David Rigsbee reviews Blue Rust
Issue > Poetry
Precious Metal
The earth is birthing
grown Chilean men
from half a mile down
they come out
head-first in a metal chute
called Phoenix
with less a bird's than a rocket's body.
They kiss their women,
they kiss the ground
as though
it were the moon,
though they've been
inside the earth two months,
eating bread and caramel lowered
by a cord. Subterranean,
they wear black glasses
when they emerge with moles' eyes,
cameras flashing.
Ariel Ticona looks on screen
like he'd make a good Jesus.
Watch him grope through light
to find the daughter born
while he was below. He knows her
from the curled,
thin image sent down with a meal,
bright shadow almost human
inside her mother's dark
mine, he thinks, the child
is mine, and one day she'll know
of nights
on the inside those seventeen
days: the rationed mackerel,
the dreams of Mapuches striking
hunger in their cells.
The dead drifted through shafts,
shifted golden bones
shaken loose by quakes,
hair glinting copper
in the constant night
like the metal ribbon
of the Rio Copiapó
(shriveled now
to nothing), though no one will ever
tell of that woman who wept
as she oiled her master's feet,
how she sang
as they sifted
through the ashes.
grown Chilean men
from half a mile down
they come out
head-first in a metal chute
called Phoenix
with less a bird's than a rocket's body.
They kiss their women,
they kiss the ground
as though
it were the moon,
though they've been
inside the earth two months,
eating bread and caramel lowered
by a cord. Subterranean,
they wear black glasses
when they emerge with moles' eyes,
cameras flashing.
Ariel Ticona looks on screen
like he'd make a good Jesus.
Watch him grope through light
to find the daughter born
while he was below. He knows her
from the curled,
thin image sent down with a meal,
bright shadow almost human
inside her mother's dark
mine, he thinks, the child
is mine, and one day she'll know
of nights
on the inside those seventeen
days: the rationed mackerel,
the dreams of Mapuches striking
hunger in their cells.
The dead drifted through shafts,
shifted golden bones
shaken loose by quakes,
hair glinting copper
in the constant night
like the metal ribbon
of the Rio Copiapó
(shriveled now
to nothing), though no one will ever
tell of that woman who wept
as she oiled her master's feet,
how she sang
as they sifted
through the ashes.