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 mundi—aloft, 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.
Looking for Migrants
Andres Rojas
also for my father
Feature Date
- October 29, 2023
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“Looking for Migrants” from THIRD WINTER IN OUR SECOND COUNTRY: by Andres Rojas.
Published by Trio House Press on July 15, 2021.
Copyright © 2021 by Andres Rojas.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
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