Poem of the Day
1981
By Asiya Wadud
in a world the orange sun resets
in a world the orange sun resets
My luckless lady needs no sheet of sun
Nor winter’s briskest word
To stir her now.
If by this wanton surge
Devised for man and beast
When first a green world told
Alone in the house your father built
and you’ve always lived in, you walk with your cane
toward the door to the basement.
It’s late, and for once
your radio turns on by itself,
with a stereo broadcast
Do not rush.
Sudden sinkings have been rare,
though, eventually, the vessel does.
When Lady Venus takes her leisure
A young man with a feathered cap
Is sometimes told to sit beside her
You are not the first man to have the shakes,
the wheels, the horrors, to wear the scarlet
snowshoe, nor yet the invincible harlot
So huge is God’s despair
In the wild cactus plain
I heard Him weeping there
But never fall from fealty to light.
You said, Melville? Now, by God, sir, why not?
The pall is comfortable enough; as soon rot
Quiet, my tiny violins, salve
the poor chests beaten bruise-grey with grief.
May you always be so happy that it stings me.