These Poems Don’t Come Out Right
By Bunkong Tuon
The virus breathes like fire over city streets
and farmland, across oceans and mountains,
over YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter.
The president suggests injecting the body
with disinfectant to kill it. Maybe
he could go first; it’s his idea after all.
I’ve become a hack, ranting as if the world
will heed my words and stop spreading
violence through fear, hate, and ignorance.
Mix misinformation with racism, greed, and ego,
and you get 2020, a reality show you didn’t know
you were a part of until it is too late. Oh,
These poems don’t come out right and
my poor wife is asleep, hands clutching
the crib where the baby was fussy all night.
I cut slices of cucumbers and strawberries,
spread apple wedges on a plate for my daughter.
Our beautiful baby is crying again.
I fetch my coffee and a baby bottle,
run up the stairs, cradle our newborn in my arms,
watching his desperate eyes look up at me for comfort.
But I have no words for him, and this ending
is not right, but I don’t know what is anymore.
Bunkong Tuon is a Cambodian-American writer and critic. He is the author of Gruel and And So I Was Blessed (both published by NYQ Books), The Doctor Will Fix It (Shabda Press), and Dead Tongue (a chapbook with Joanna C. Valente, Yes Poetry). He teaches at Union College, in Schenectady, New York. He tweets @BunkongTuon.
Photo credit: m anmia via a Creative Commons license.