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English, Prose bj . English, Prose bj .

Isolated Incidents

The woman in the house across the street decides to leave. A man walks out of a bar and disappears. In California, half a million people all look up at the sky, and find that there is nothing out of the ordinary.

On the shoulder of a highway two brothers kiss in the back of a car while their father sleeps in the front seat. Another man in another car, going forty miles an hour in a one hundred-mile zone, shakes his head at something said on the radio. A house in the middle of nowhere, recently foreclosed: the wallpaper in the living room slowly peels away.

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English, Poetry bj . English, Poetry bj .

texts to abe lincoln

1.

abe, it’s been a century and a half

since we last talked. how the heck are ya?

my mom got rid of the bunk beds

when i was 10. i didn’t marry that girl

i liked in the first grade. feelin’ okay.

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English, Poetry bj . English, Poetry bj .

Visit to the Grave of Abraham Lincoln

I’ve been to the Lincoln Memorial quite a few times with the childish, stubborn understanding that Abe was buried there, that a memorial required an actual corpse to be complete, something to mourn beyond a field of marble embossments, but it came to my attention, really through a logical progression where I first noted the openness of the space, my pure and complete map of every portico, every chamber and the severity of its molding, like a mausoleum, a place designed to eventually fall into disrepair, to fall in ruin against the summer sun, heavy rain threatening the indifference of its tennessee marble;

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Mandarin, Poetry bj . Mandarin, Poetry bj .

饮下的泪是所有

曾经灌进喉咙的苦水

抚养过的寄生虫

墙上干瘪的金鱼标本

绿叶裂开的筋脉

雪花深埋的寒冷

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English, Prose bj . English, Prose bj .

The Sight of Sound

When I was a girl, my grandmother told me a Devi saved her life during a four-story suicide leap the year China went Red. Me on her lap, she told how she toed the building ledge, staring out over the network of alleyways smothered in smoke and screams.

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English, Poetry bj . English, Poetry bj .

September in Dhaka

Everything around me shimmered

through my irises—lights, colors, a dun sky

seamlessly curved into the earth, neon attires

strewn on wet tracks, outlines

of shadows scudding across faces, but if

some faces reminded of other faces

I would awake, suddenly discovering myself

against the immense expanse

of a city I could escape only with my soul.

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English, Poetry bj . English, Poetry bj .

Buddha Was a Husband, Father,

And a son. We know he loved his mother.

Mourned her in the myths where he caused her death.

Cherished her in the ones where she didn’t die.

Heard her when she called out Siddhartha, Siddhartha,

come sit next to me and listen to my voice. Siddhartha,

love is everything. You must love. You must love

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English, Poetry bj . English, Poetry bj .

august, nineteen-forty-seven

your mother tells you to drench yourself in every piece of clothing you own and you do not want

to be a jungli so you wrap your torso in kurtas and salwar kameezes and layer your long legs in

tight churidars and you want to bring your ghagras but they are too heavy to run in so you leave

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English, Prose bj . English, Prose bj .

Phoebe’s Tooth

Phoebe, having finished her stockings, started on her husband’s shirts and then, with Rose, tackled the vegetable garden while Rose told her stories about her brother’s exploits at Salamanca, which sounded like a lark, at least in her telling. Phoebe held the wholly unfounded belief that she might have made a good soldier, which she voiced as she pulled a doll-sized radish out of the earth and shook it firmly. Laughing, Rose shielded herself from the spray of dirt.

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English, Poetry bj . English, Poetry bj .

untitled

because that’s all i wanted to be.

a girl left nameless—rendered whole

& baptized in all things holy.

please. this is a eulogy for girls

born untitled. we can be more than the syllables

clenched between yellowing teeth.

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