Today's poem is by Elizabeth Jacobson
Hour of Lead
When you are by the sea on an island made mostly of cement
When in the morning there are no mourning doves susurrating
No grackles raucously settling down in palm crowns at nightfall
When a brown anole fans its red dewlap
And another crawls out from under a pile of moldering
A greasy black tail sprout growing from its broken stub
When a cormorant dives for young snook in the bay then comes up
Where the mangrove forest is no longer a forest
Because some days you feel incremental disaster in each second,
Because on these days, you are like a tongue cut from a mouth
Because on these days you know you will never be empty enough
You lie on the hot brick patio and sweat, your weighty limbs soften
You stare and stare at a blistering sky
When finally, having reached the very bottom,
There springs a wondrous moment, like a trap that has unhinged:
And you feel a slight coil of return a slight lifting
Which you recognize as your species' uncanny ability
in the strangler figs
defending its territory of pavers
Brazilian Beauty Leaf leaves,
empty-beaked, trembles on a rusty culvert
to spread and dry its accordion wings
no longer an oyster grove,
your raft no longer banked in its dense cabled roots
which inflames the mind like grit in an eye
into the sinking mortar
that place where self-absorption is flawless
to imagine buoyancy,
where there isn't any,
As if this will cure one failure of the self after another.
Copyright © 2025 Elizabeth Jacobson All rights reserved
from There Are as Many Songs in the World as Branches of Coral
Free Verse Editions
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission
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