Sholeh Wolpé: California Poets Part 4, Four Poems
Sholeh Wolpé (photo by Sophie Kandaouroff)
December 29th, 2021
California Poets: Part IV
Sholeh Wolpé
Four beads from Sholeh Wolpé’s memoir in verse, Abacus of Loos forthcoming in March 2022 from the University of Arkansas Press
Bead 1
I sit at this kitchen table in Los Angeles and take account:
There is my childhood house becoming smoke, friends
scattered like storm-blown dandelion seeds, my mother
tongue ripped blue from my throat.
See the man I used to call husband sinking into the twin
lungs of an ice beast, a love murdered by his own pallid
hands;
see vein shades of lovers who came and went, a homeland
community in jail, my cousin’s husband graying on the
run, my school principal and his wife hanging from beryl
ropes.
That we choose the color
of our loss, like a blue
sash draped across
mourners’ black. That
eyes follow blind
towards the cobalt moon,
will slant us over and
down, crooked toward
mud on our graves.
Bead 2
Loss is a
language we all
speak well,
a body moan that echoes
between ribs, the downfall
that becomes windfall.
Bead 3
Granddaddy takes me and my brothers out every Friday to
a circus filled with tigers, elephants, horses, and shirtless
men in glittering tights. There are women tinier than my
child’s body, animals bigger than my room. It is roaring
fun until the giant with four faces. My arms begin to shake.
Shivers ripple to the tips of my fingers. Granddaddy puts a
hand on my shoulder, says: It’s just a mask on his head.
But I know better
because anything that’s
loved— a delicious
granddaddy day
in that circus in Tehran,
sticky cotton candy melting
its pink song into my mouth,
my brothers, each naughty, toothy with joy—
is always burning
toward a future not yet
come, fireworks in my
brain,
hot sparks welded to each memory.
Bead 4 A painted cardboard car gives birth to clown after clown. Like lovers: the soldier, the thief, the cheater, the psycho lawyer.
Author Bio:
Sholeh Wolpé is an Iranian-American poet, translator, and playwright. She is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, several plays, and an oratorio. Her most recent book, Abacus of Loss: A Memoir in Verse (Univ. of Arkansas Press, March 2022) is hailed by National Book Award finalist Ilya Kaminsky as a book “that created its own genre—a thrill of lyric combined with the narrative spell.” Sholeh has lived in Iran, Trinidad, and the United Kingdom and is currently a writer-in-residence at the University of California, Irvine. She lives in Los Angeles and Barcelona.
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