The Country in Which I Was Born

The country in which I was born
cannot be seen anymore

you can smell it sometimes
turning a corner, crossing a sewer

or underneath the trees that take
the power-line between their flowers;

sometimes crossing drainage ditches
between streets you can hear it sing

and the abutments of city blocks
rub together like chafed skin

on a cobbler’s wheel
trying to make chamois out of cow tongue;

and the children running
in between the cars where I was born

do not know there was ever any earth
between these two rivers of sand.

I sit. I hear the start
of rush hour over my coffee

and somewhere the little house
where I was born is full of nothing.

Source: Poetry (April 2022)