Self-Portrait as Revision
I am the storm-torn palm frond draped on the balcony wall. I am the cumin in the soup stirring the lentil’s sleep. I am the olive’s skeletal pit, the cat’s paw, the thistle spear. The clay in the kiln cast into a small flask to hold centuries of musk. For weeks I do not sing, though I gush, an underground rill carving blindly to the sea. I succumb to thunder, the urchin’s sting, the softness of moss. This is my prayer. I am driftwood—parched in white heat, soaked in January rain. A seashell pressed to its pale grave. The wind rises, rewriting the hymnals of dunes. I am hurricaned. Worn smooth again.
To the One We Lost
child when the blue-black sac of you dropped a yolk of matted cells and plasma into the toilet’s white womb i blamed the rain the fried eggplant the trip to the mall blamed my past selfish ways faulted the oak that fell across our fence while you sailed off my second my spawn little prawn i never met peaceful you floated from your watery cave to the salty grottos of the sea where perhaps a spiny anemone caught you in its tentacles a coral bed your cradle and the manatee moaned a mournful song _________
Angela Narciso Torres is the author of Blood Orange (Willow Books Poetry Prize). Her work appears or is forthcoming in POETRY, Cortland Review Quarterly West, Bellingham Review, and Missouri Review. A graduate of Warren Wilson’s MFA program and Harvard Graduate School of Education, Angela has received fellowships from Bread Loaf and Ragdale Foundation. Born in Brooklyn and raised in Manila, she is a senior/reviews editor for RHINO and a reader for New England Review.