elegy
with burnt spoon & horse chestnuts
thought
there were
tiny coyotes
in the walls.
could feel my lips
but they weren’t attached.
lights harshing
the big rigs
sway in their wind.
snaggletooth girls
with takeout boxes.
little crucibles of heat.
we all have drowsy
recording devices.
chosen names &
families.
amplify the
dregs.
we are so clever.
we keep
coming.
shake my hand,
then count your fingers.
Poet
Nina Puro’s debut full-length collection, winner of the 2017 New Issues Poetry
Prize, is Each Tree Could Hold a Noose or a House (Kalamazoo MI: New Issues Press, 2018), a collection of
confessional lyric, each imbued with a fierce and fearless restlessness. In
Puro’s poems, there is an acknowledgement that every object, every word, is a
potential weapon, and one that can be far too easily used against us, and these
poems offer both precision and witness, examination and exhaustion, a fiery
optimism and a determined heart. How does one survive and not be broken?
I am not sure if what I wanted for myself,
once, was a witness. To what happened. To naming what happened. No way to
describe. The tyranny of language cannot. To have cut how many cities down,
bodies back, plastic rings from soda cans & balconies & receipts. A sky
particulate: engraved with fine tracings, latticework or ironwork. A buzzing in
the room. I didn’t know where from. Light-specks floated from our feet, as if
we were an inauspicious constellation. As if radioactive.
There is the past & there is the past. There
is the sound of metal in wind—off-kilter, tonight. A boat with no ocean close. As
if it knows something in the low tones, as if warning us in the high. If the
ghosts are back. In the close-packed concrete room, I could see the whorls in
the girl’s ears, the darkness that hung around her—unnamable damage, something
rent—& that was part of it: the witnessing. The way her hair fell in dark
wings along the mark the blade left. A gash longer than the length of what we
could understand—scale, irrevocability. (“Bare Life”)
Puro’s
poems are thick, and impossible; the finest kind of political, in their adherence
to speaking of family conflict, silences and trauma; how the world breaks, and
how people break, forced to abandon everything or begin again from scratch. “I’m
not sure how I decided / to join the living,” Puro writes, to open the poem “Shift
Work,” continuing: “but I know / when it began: that winter so long /
persimmons lasted until April / & the neighbors hissed until three a.m.” There
is darkness here, but one that is examined alongside the light, weaving intricately
in, around and through, concurrently writing hopelessness against hope, and the
possibility of all that could begin. There are lines that leave marks, and render
bone; lines that catch, and carry. There are lines that take what can’t be
said, and speak it, such as this fragment from “Top 40”: “A father is a piano
full / of bees Gender is a skirt of wet rocks,” or the ending of the poem “elegy
with trillium & medical records,” that reads:
if we weren’t
wax I’d remember
how to measure
smoke
kings burned a cigar
then weighed the ash
dozens of holiday weekends
spent speaking only to
the stove.
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