"faizullah" poems
After Tarfia Faizullah’s Hidden Registers
She winces at taboo, the same way
she looks at empty ultrasounds.
The ache
inside the hollowed curve of her
womb, she imagines carrying color
to fill
translucent dreams. Her hand paints
spells onto her stomach, she wants
to believe again. That split
a girl finds between her legs,
the wonder
it first captured, she wants newborn pink
on her cheeks and unmoving lips.
The pout her ******** makes,
rises in swells under the moon,
to feel
that luminous glow. She holds
out, the palms of her hands,
for alms. Comets ricochet into her,
until her breath slows to sleep. She is still,
the woman
inside her is quiet, laying in wait.
They dream of seeds and sunrises.
A. T. Bockholdt
Jul 29, 2018
Jul 29, 2018 at 9:23 PM UTC
Our free weekly e-mail newsletter alerts you to upcoming featured poets, news from the world of poetry, and special events like this one: again this year for Poetry Month and our annual April fund drive, we've asked 21 poets (including Tarfia Faizullah, Peter Sirr, Joshua Mehigan, and Luisa A. Igloria, pictured here) to select poems to be delivered to you by e-mail Monday through Friday of each week in April — their favorites from among The Greats — along with their comments on the poems.
Tarfia Faizullah photo Peter Sirr photo Joshua Mehigan photo Luisa A. Igloria photo
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Apr 16, 2015
Apr 16, 2015 at 9:59 PM UTC