Portrait Of
By Anni Liu
There was a woman who claimed to be made of rain. Dust and the water that closes around it like a pearl, like any conglomeration of past irritations. She claimed no resemblance to Venus in her half shell, or to any lounging surrender of flesh. Let’s say she’s your mother. Let’s say her body has also been under scrutiny for messages to a future viewer. When she was a child, she dissipated, no childhood. She pulled her body toward what seemed full and sweet. She dug into the earth expecting to be fed. It isn’t that she climbed too high or hungered too much. There is no pattern here to warn you off the trail. When you get caught in mist, choked up by a cloud, how do you greet that cliff? You might as well stop figuring your own tragedy as that which she calls her life.
Source: Poetry (October 2021)