Looking for Migrants

Andres Rojas

also for my father

Him: a brackish lagoon,the sun a wire hyssopon my lips. He never walkedthis salt-coarse sandmy blistered feettrace their search on.                 * * *The only thirst here:mine. Sanderlings and dunlinsdrink the Atlantic, snortits brine, will soon breed summeragain in Hudson Bay.Unless I come too closeI am notof their world.                 * * *Like the least terns,he came north to Floridabruised in the crossing:everything that fliestakes off and landsin to the wind,that spiritus mundialoft, who knowswhat furies await.                 * * *A rare bird on this beach:a rufous fowl, adriftwith the tide. He did not flynor try to fly. I gave himone dry nighton a full stomach,carried himlight as ashes in another box.He had no name I knew.He did not livein any guidebook.I've watchedfor others since, intuitingbirds weren't migrants oncebut grew into it, that balanceof need: to settle in lackor to go on lookingfor what isn't there.

Feature Date

Series

Selected By

Share This Poem

Print This Poem

Andres Rojas was born in Cuba and came to the U.S. at age 13. He has been writing poetry since just about then, has an MFA and a JD from the University of Florida, and currently works for the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

Minneapolis, Minnesota

A poetry collection detailing the experience of the exiled, this collection both haunts and inspires. In elegies that mourn loss of a homeland, Rojas also captures the essence of the experience of settling into a new land, in all its strangeness and sometimes, ridiculousness.

Poetry Daily Depends on You

With your support, we make reading the best contemporary poetry a treasured daily experience. Consider a contribution today.