~This poem was previously published in The Los Angeles Review (2010).
From
These Split Ends
-for Jessica Keough
After I
proposed marriage, we decided
to start
cutting each other’s hair.
First time, I
was drunk on vodka tonics
and used
poultry shears, but she trusted me
enough to score
off a few inches.
We did it
standing in the apartment’s
old cast iron
tub, naked, my hands trembling.
Her curls made
it difficult. The blades
didn’t trim
right, and I strained to snip each lock.
While
inspecting the workmanship,
I dropped the
shears, nicked her ankle.
I forget how
exactly she reacted, but it was calm—
something of a
soft glance down.
As I palmed the
clutch of her strands,
worried over
the neat horizon of hair,
her manner
suggested to me, There is time
to get better. I planted the split ends in the
wastebasket
and knew we’d
both grow from this.
*****
~This poem was previously published in West Branch (2011).
Marriage
I think there
is hope for us
if we make our
home
into an aviary
and fill it
with Magnolia
warblers,
wake to the
rustle of feathers
like book pages
in the wind.
I can pull the
screen
from our storm
door and tack
chicken wire in
its place,
while you crack
and scatter
shells of
sunflower hears,
spread millet
and thistle—
we can make it
a ritual,
patching and
spreading—
and every
nightfall we’ll kneel
and replace the
newspaper
that cover our
hardwood floor.
If we keep larks
and flycatchers
in the den,
there’s a chance
we’ll cast away
any mark
of trouble.
Wader nests will line
the staircase
like perches
in a flight
coop. The thrum
of fresh water
from the faucets
will make
birdbaths of sink.
When we uncover
their routines—
frail starlings
and house wrens—
we’ll hold
watch in turn,
be the first
figures each chick
sees through
gummy pupils.
Each Spring
swop old scrape
for new, sift
through duff
of our yard,
harvest fallen limbs
and dropped oak
leaves
the size of
ball mitts. Once
the undergrowth
is carried back
to our bedroom,
we’ll curl
and fetter
boughs around our bed,
gather in the
billow of down.
Our flock will
fly south
for the winter,
return when weather
gives the first
hint of paradise,
but I’ll never
parry from you
unless you
teach me how. I’ll forgo
the clutch
outside of our cage
and sing for
nothing else.
Forget the
gravity of words, the work
it takes for an
egg to hatch.
*****
THE
STORY BEHIND THE POEMS
On “Marriage”: I had the incredible
privilege of having Judy Jordan as a mentor while I attended Southern Illinois
University Carbondale for my graduate studies. Besides constantly swearing to
her students that good poetry takes dozens of hours of crafting, she also spoke
often, and highly, about how important it is for good writers to keep birds and
tree guides on their desks. So, of course, when I heard this on the first day
of her class I knew that on my way home I was going to run out and pick one of
each up. A few weeks later, unable to think about what to write, I started
perusing the bird guide and just fell in love with the different names, the
sounds and look. Around that time, too, a month before, I had asked my wife to
marry me and was very much thinking about what it takes to have a successful,
wonderful relationship. The ideas quickly came together and this poem hatched.
*****
ABOUT
MARK JAY BREWIN, JR.
Mark Jay Brewin, Jr., won the 2012 Agha
Shahid Ali Prize in Poetry of the University of Utah Press for his first book
manuscript, Scrap Iron. His poems
have been published or are forthcoming in Beloit
Poetry Journal, Antioch Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, The Hollins Critic,
Copper Nickel, Southern Humanities Review, Poet Lore, North American Review,
Greensboro Review, Prairie Schooner, and elsewhere. He is a graduate of the
MFA program of Southern Illinois University-Carbondale. You can find more of
his work at: https://markjaybrewinjr.com.
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