The deep rainbow of oil slickedin the supermarket parking lotcalls to me with its dark beautyto step in and paint dirtymy already worn-white shoes.At camp the bonfire’s reachingtongues ascended to try to lickthe tree. I would throw whatevertrash I had in to see whatcolors the garbage would burn:turn from waste to green orpurple glow. Fall: the horsepulled a hayride and I tracedthe patterned indentationsthe straw left on my thighs.I can no longer see oiland not think of the oceanbloated with it, a duck or ottermucked with viscous liquidnow just black and not glinting.I can’t see a horse withoutthinking of the bloodied daywhen the marchers were meton the bridge and trampled, batonand hoof making fragile workof brown-encased bone.How’s that for nonviolence?Even the ocean catches firewith enough oil or gas. Even a gascan eat through an atmosphereor a lung. I can’t stop clearingmy dry throat and my groanssync into metronome, turn musicto pain and itch. Nathanael West,a lesser-known modernist, writes:“The physical world has a tropismfor disorder, entropy.” I can’t stopbuilding monuments to the chaos.I can’t stop adoring the blood’scool crimson, how it insistson spilling out sometimes evenfrom a small nick. I tellmy psychiatrist I have gottenvery good at finding the beautyin this awful and awe-filled world,but it gets hard to feel it. The headcan hold knowledge the bodyrejects. Nathanael again: “All orderis doomed, yet the battleis worthwhile.” I’m still reachinglike that polluted fire. I’m hopingif I reach the branch I use it notto burn down but climb up.
Glint
Feature Date
- July 9, 2023
Series
Selected By
Share This Poem
Print This Poem
First Appeared in Mizna 23.2, the Black SWANA Takeover Issue.
Copyright © 2022 by Marlin M. Jenkins.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
23.2
St. Paul, Minnesota
Executive + Artistic Director
Lana Barkawi
Editorial Assistant
Sarah Dillard
Mizna is a critical platform for contemporary literature, art, film, and cultural programming centering the work of Arab and Southwest Asian and North African artists. For twenty years, we have sought to reflect the depth and multiplicity of our community and have been committed to being a space for Arab, Muslim, and other artists from the region to reclaim our narratives and engage audiences in meaningful and artistically excellent art.
We publish Mizna: Prose, Poetry and Art Exploring Arab America, the only Arab American lit and art journal in the country; produce the Twin Cities Arab Film Festival, the largest and longest running Arab film fest in the Midwest; and offer classes, readings, performances, public art, and community events, having featured over 400 local and global writers, filmmakers, and artists.
Poetry Daily Depends on You
With your support, we make reading the best contemporary poetry a treasured daily experience. Consider a contribution today.