Tuesday, May 18, 2021

From Richmond, 1865 by Patrick Tong

          after Lily Zhou

These mornings, I could mistake your sutured

shadows of sunrise for the fists of another fire.


The bridges, once hovering over the minnowed river,

now sunken into a tapestry of flames. Water. Fire. 


Earth, the imprints of bootstep staggered like 

a graveyard. Air, the horizon coloring itself into


the wilt of my father’s ashes. Richmond, in years, 

they’ll immobilize us into history textbooks, 


black-and-white snapshots of an anonymous family, 

a polychromatic film we’ll never watch. Confederacy, 


treachery. Richmond, in this divided country, we’ll 

multiply the death toll by three each day, subtract 


neighborhoods from the population, add epitaphs to 

an inventory for the ages. We’ll wake into the 


world where every poem bloodies into another 

battlefield. Listen as they split into stanzas of smoke 


and setback, the grammar of war always built 

on clauses of purpose. As we raise rifles to the 


sky like a hunch. As a generation of bullets 

immigrates through the land. As somewhere, 


another neighborhood sputters to the ground, 

stone house walls creasing into each other like gravity.  




Patrick Tong is a student from the greater Chicago area.

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