Fady Joudah‘s “Footprints in the Order of Disappearance,” from our Spring 2018 Issue, will be featured in the 2020 Pushcart anthology due out in November.Â
A fever of thyself think of the Earth
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I call the finding of certain things loss
I hold grief close to brace myself for the expected
The unexpected not coeval with the unwanted
they kneel me
I have a fever
when at customs I don’t declare                         Â
what I brought into my country                        Â
from that other minor country
a periodic fever
when in legacy mode my teeth have grown                Â
too yellow for the abrupt hug       Â
                    Â
of a carnivorous flower
And that I pray for bipedal aliens                         Â
or play to inner ear bones those Max Ernst structures
Consanguineous or not         Â
all my erasures are relatives
And you and I are hapten-stance:Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
you elicit me to me                                      Â
move me in me
I have a fever others speak I learned love in
For relief I braid Tylenol with Motrin                     Â
at the shore of words the sea ends
Consider me a color                                     Â
an unspoken sound                                    Â
aphasia won’t clarify
Per your mother                                        Â
they have books on tape now
Per mine dead dogs will follow me
The soul of one dog will enter and exit other dogs          Â
whose deaths I’ll come upon
I won’t know whose soul I will run                        Â
lizards and rodents and a rabbit                          Â
will mortgage my dreams
There will be light to wake me sootless                    Â
there will be light to resect my spleen
There are always women and bees                        Â
and who can’t tell a story about honey?
Newborns aside                                        Â
I’m unlikely to cause anyone harm
My benefits outstrip my collateral                        Â
on an earth we’ll never plow
What if butterfly or moth on lemon or mango tree?         Â
What if I taste the coffee you swirled inside your cheeks?
To each its caterpillar
I defervesce                                            Â
I have a fever others speak I learned love in
Between my nipples and knees and within                 Â
the frame whose borders are laser-hung                   Â
to render umpires surplus
I defervesce                                            Â
our error was mutual                                    Â
and being touched was how                              Â
you touched me back
Your cherries are black                                 Â
your eyes grabbed mine by the elbows                    Â
our fourth and sixth cranial nerves intact
You pitched your face in my shoulder                     Â
variance in clinical features
strapped to the waist
To be clear                                            Â
one mustn’t be connected to the bed of another            Â
about to be shocked
To be clear                                            Â
what one does with the towel is the business              Â
of making cancer history
A remittent fever                                       Â
I too shall overcome
the majority incarcerated in herniated prisms              Â
out of what kind of house into prison
Out of prison into what kind of house
My fever says I am the one who never was                Â
a narcissus under hooves                                Â
now a boxthorn
I’d bury my sorrow alive                                 Â
but my sorrow has bones
My fever says I need skin                                Â
other than that of a bacteriophage                        Â
and besides
mist was falling                                          and Sisyphus                                           Â
forget him
he could’ve died like the rest of us
Where is he now                                        Â
and what has he seen?
Which protection program and was he                    Â
at any point a Gizmo?
Tell me a story when you were little
Your mom bathed you until you were ten                  Â
you said you’d tie your dad’s shoes                       Â
for him when he’s ninety
Tell me when you opened your lunch box                  Â
she’d packed for you the night before
Here’s a lock of your toddler hair                         Â
and your baby teeth
biting your dorsal wrist                                  Â
in a perfect circle to tell the time
the marks take to disappear
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Fady Joudah’s latest book of poetry, Footsteps in the Order of Disappearance, is available from Milkweed Press. Â