If Ibeyi
To recall a last image of you I have tried I cannot but when
our hungers are one how am I certain of anything but you
your ache & eyes are mine July another incomplete rotation 16 miles
long 3 miles at its widest point Daddy laughs conjures this island
world so small you can throw a rock clear from one end to the other
I once threw a rock beyond what my eyes could collect what if I hit others
watched them open & spill on dry island earth syrup sweet & inexact
our song improvised like those acrobats high winged with leaf & wire
makeshift holy dazzled elders see ghosts here rumors walk
out of the bush I ought to own my resemblances
Another Questionable Offering Beats Ether
Vagabondage wayward hours retracing escape
routes out of my name call me away
from this body the unruly tune of empty belly
disjointed wingbeats and sharpened teeth
bait blood I swore could not be mine to blame
a sighing wind reckless weather patterns moving
limbs from the west a favorite ghost rerouted
so close to the sun Mommy warned about flying
in the face of god an ancestor signifying
the coffer’s voracity an accomplice to what acts
as always explain some sorts of madness
and its transcendence
∞
Brian Francis is a Cave Canem fellow from New York City. He has a BA in Creative Nonfiction from the University of Pittsburgh and an MFA in Poetry from NYU. His work has appeared in The Cortland Review, Tupelo Quarterly, Vinyl Poetry, Kweli Journal, No, Dear, and Pittsburgh Poetry Review. He teaches Middle School and lives in Harlem.