Description de l’Égypte
By Zaina Alsous
One morning a charred ink line
in the botanist’s notebook:
after the invasion, a garden planted in Cairo.
The French army recording the distance
between beast and cotton seed.
Napoleon had wings, flew as Mercury above the pyramids
a sprig of blue inventing atmosphere.
The text speaks it and so it becomes
image and imagine and the people beneath;
pool of statives beating know known know known.
One morning my birth is an ink line
in the language of plantations.
I grow to watch the memory assemble me:
a fiction of poppies and idolatry,
gradient in supernumerary fervor,
bloody at the footnote. There is a door that betweens
me and then, the authors say the door is always open,
the ghosts say the door is not for us.
Source: Poetry (October 2019)