Excavation
By Lukas Bacho
After Zaina Alsous and Seamus Heaney
One afternoon a wet half-moon
on the terrain below my lip:
mouth-blades splitting flesh
to immortalize desire, sheets soiled
after the digging. I never knew
ink could spill straight from the mouth
or dye toothpaste the color of longing,
and yet his typewriter carriage of a jaw
justifies anything but words. Here is the couch
where my mother consoled my sister and me—
Madonna-of-the-Rocks style—after the yelling.
The same bedrock she cocoons in to escape
the snore. I shouldn’t mistake warm spoon
for parenthesis (a half-moon whose other half
is never far). One evening my lamp is a bright half-moon
striking memory like a match,
begging proficiency in a language I mine
from his collarbone. There is a pen that betweens
now and him. The pen says the ink is always
flowing; the shovel says the ink is not for us.
Source: Poetry (November 2020)