Poem of the Day
1981
By Asiya Wadud
in a world the orange sun resets
in a world the orange sun resets
I fix every kind of stab wound, fractured clavicle,
gold teeth sliced out of sleeping mouths for trophy
earrings, all paranoia's graffiti pleading. Doc please
In a sense,
Jack and Manuel were starting over again.
Jack, a Romanian Jew who designed our house,
In the garden. Sun
on the river
flashing past. I
are all we have. So count them as they pass. They pass
too quickly
out of breath. Don’t dwell on the grave which yawns for
twas the night before Columbus Day, ’70
and the humidity gave a semblance
of warmth to a day not unchilly, even somewhat clammy.
Dear Kenward,
What a pearl
of a letter knife. It’s just
We were wise to say.
Goodbye, cheap lamps
The search for health and pleasure
leads to no fairer clime
We cannot fight on this glue
give us the bread we are used to
There is a hornet in the room
and one of us will have to go