Iraqi Boy
What appear to be
peach-white, over-washed pajamas
in the washed-out newspaper photo
on one side droop
like a monk’s hood,
the upper half of that leg
raised with the other, whole one
and the hands
they’re there!
and the less washed-out
pink balloon above them that they reach for or have
just let go
—the latter probably as one hand, palm up,
is wide of it,
two-thirds of a laughing mouth
visible, the wheelchair in this case,
its sparkle stark against
the flannel and plied living limbs within it,
a tool of fun. Such wisdom’s possible
here only, the ability to feel
glad to be alive
gone on the outside,
the “cloistered incarceration” of the ward
holding the boys
as if they were a group of monks.
Asked by a visitor
what it’s like to live secluded
most of the time,
mute and with forced labor,
a chronic lack of sleep for all the praying,
the Benedictine monk
asked back:
“Have you ever been in love?”
Source: Poetry (September 2008)