Dad Poem by Joshua Bennett
No visitors allowed is what the masked woman behind
the desk says only seconds
after me and your mother
arrive for the ultrasound.
But I’m the father, I explain, like it means something
defensible. She looks at me as if
I’ve just confessed to being a minotaur
in human disguise. Repeats the line. Caught
in the space between astonishment
& rage, we hold hands a minute
or so more, imagining you a final time before our rushed goodbye,
your mother vanishing
down the corridor
to call forth a veiled vision
of you through glowing white
machines. One she will bring
to me later on, printed and slight
-ly wrinkled at its edges,
this secondhand sight
of you almost unbearable
both for its beauty and
necessary deferral.
What can I be to you now,
smallest one, across the expanse
of category & world catastrophe,
what love persists
in a time without touch
Corona Diary By Cornelius Eady
These days, you want the poem to be
A mask, soft veil between what floats
Invisible, but known in the air.
You’ve just read that there’s a singer
You love who might be breathing their last,
And wish the poem could travel,
Unintrusive, as poems do from
The page to the brain, a fan’s medicine.
Those of us who are lucky enough
To stay indoors with a salary count the days
By press conference. For others, there is
Always the dog and the park, the park
And the dog. A relative calls; how you doin’?
(Are you a ghost?). The buds emerge, on time,
For their brief duty. The poem longs to be a filter, but
In floats Spring’s insistence. We wait.
The End of Poetry By Ada Limón
Enough of osseous and chickadee and sunflower
and snowshoes, maple and seeds, samara and shoot,
enough chiaroscuro, enough of thus and prophecy
and the stoic farmer and faith and our father and tis
of thee, enough of bosom and bud, skin and god
not forgetting and star bodies and frozen birds,
enough of the will to go on and not go on or how
a certain light does a certain thing, enough
of the kneeling and the rising and the looking
inward and the looking up, enough of the gun,
the drama, and the acquaintance’s suicide, the long-lost
letter on the dresser, enough of the longing and
the ego and the obliteration of ego, enough
of the mother and the child and the father and the child
and enough of the pointing to the world, weary
and desperate, enough of the brutal and the border,
enough of can you see me, can you hear me, enough
I am human, enough I am alone and I am desperate,
enough of the animal saving me, enough of the high
water, enough sorrow, enough of the air and its ease,
I am asking you to touch me.
Voyages by Nathalie Handal
Shut off the music, the lights,
close the window and travel,
let your body gather voices
as if it’s flowers
in an infinite garden,
thank your spirit
for the flight,
thank the earth
for the echoes and empathy,
for emptying your fears of time past,
be certain of your direction,
your heart knows the road,
the one with needles under your feet
that feels less painful
than all the dying around,
the one that is made of water
where floating is a
long and short breath,
and always be kind to
the healing earth,
don’t be tempted by its roars
which are its pains,
let the ache out,
gather all your selves
angel and bird
ancestor and bark,
gather your wanderings
so you can rest for a while,
then awake to help
those who didn’t make it back.
Copyright © 2020 by Edited by Alice Quinn. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.