December 1861: Everyone I Know is Dead
by Andrew Payton
Laguna Ojo de Liebre, Mexico
The long night
sinks to its waist in sand–
men rinse flensing knives
as skeletons lift limbs
in praise of sunrise.
In the jowls and beaks
of coyote and buzzard
it is hard to think myself
flesh; spit like fetid
seawater. A pricked earth–
Eye of the Jack Rabbit Lagoon–
an open wound from bird-view.
As the tides reorient
the water goes red
with my blood,
and I have oceans.
Charles Scammon, American,
commanding the barque Ocean Bird,
sails his whalemen south. The sun
a boiled eyeball: they eat so much
yet so much spoils.
The sea keeps its cemetery
at the edge of continents.
The wind rolls the sky
and I shake free of bone.
Teeth won’t pick clean.
Even if you spoke my language,
all I’d have to do is sing.
51·çÁ÷¹ÙÍø the Author
Andrew Payton is a Maryland native and MFA candidate in Creative Writing and Environment at Iowa State University. His work is featured in recent or forthcoming issues of The Greensboro Review, Bayou Magazine, Fourth River, Notre Dame Review, and won the 2013 James Hearst Poetry Prize at North American Review.