Four Seasons, Chicago by Kandala Singh
In my country, women sew silences in colorful cloth.
Four Seasons, Chicago
Downtown, buildings have muted their eyes. A pigeon pecks a piece of chipped Chagall mosaic, sits on a moment that has a flower in it. Assemblage is an ancient art. In my country, women sew silences in colorful cloth. Here, the city swirls in broken chroma. The river pulses blue at the waist. I search for joy in slashed columns of sky. Sift debris for new gods: brighter, plastic, more elastic. Become a smoker, add to the greedy river. Look how it meanders, gathers wilting bits to make a whole.
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First published in Southeast Review
Yet another great pick. This poem takes me to Chicago, and then that last tercet could be any river, anywhere. In that moment I love that river.
gorgeous