Two Poems, by p.e. garcia

POEM FOR THE SUPER FROST MOON THAT APPEARED ON THE EVE OF MY 30TH BIRTHDAY

in the sky, a little egg
hatches ice over the shadow-
light & ugly muscles
that twist

my skeleton.

i sing duende
for the headless deer
& ask a black squirrel
to hold

my hand.

who named december
when like a wound
my body wet with blood
was born into earth from

my mother?

one day
i’ll ask an ancestor
if they ever expected
me to be

the tree they planted.

one day
the thin frost coating my skin
will flow like rivers
mindless through

the rock.

one day
we’ll all breathe easy,
the graves will shudder & shout,
& the moon will meet

the sea.

A PHOTOGRAPH OF THE MOON

every poem is about the moon in that every poem is about the earth & the moon is a part of the earth—a dry dead part but still part—ergo it follows that every poem is an ocean because every ocean is a part of the earth & every part of the earth is part of the moon & every ocean is the moon

i mean

that’s just logic: every ocean is the moon

you know, like a photograph,
like Barthes once said: there are three things to say

about the subject
of a photograph: 

he will die
he is dying
he is dead

 

ergo every photo is the living-dying-dead

ergo every photo is the moon is a poem is the ocean is the living-dying-dead

 

**

 

when i’m sleepy & lost on the subway

i’ll try to find the moon

 

beneath New York City

 

no-one is sleeping, just burrowing around with perpetual open-eyes,

god, where is the moon & where is the ocean?

 

when i’m on the Greyhound back to Philadelphia,

i’ll try to find the moon

 

somewhere on the Jersey Turnpike

 

everyone is asleep outside the city limits

god, here is the moon & here is the ocean

 

**

i keep saying the word actually

 

i roll it around in my mouth

like a jawbreaker

 

a little sugarmoon

sweet & lingering

 

& meaningless

 

**

it is dark outside but the moon keeps reflecting daylight

from the other side of the earth

 

**

 

i keep saying the word sueño

 

i spill it over my lips

like a too-big gulp of water

 

it runs over my chest

i dream of a sleep

 

like Barthes once said: bursting with legibility

 

**

 

the moon is always asleep in the ocean,

waiting to pull up the blanket of water

 

waiting to pull all the words over our heads & drown us

 

i want to ask you to take a picture of the living-dying-dead, but there isn’t anything that could freeze an ocean (& i hear the earth keeps heating up & up & up)

 

we’ll burn to death before too long

beneath the glow of the moon,

beneath the weight of an ocean,

beneath the bodies of our words

 

& when we do,

 

when we sleep,

 

sueño, sueño, sueño

 

__

p.e. garcia is a Features Editor for the Rumpus and the author of fictions & incantations (Sad Spell Press), dear god, dear gordon (tenderness lit), and p.e. garcia (Awst Press). They were born and raised in Arkansas but currently live in Philadelphia where they are a PhD student in Rhetoric.

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