Kúghą/Home
In the outskirts in a room on the second floor he slept and woke.
—Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, tr. by Will Petersen
my boyhood home became periphery because of its location
eight miles away from town, the house I grew up in now empty
burrows inside a thicket of forest left pockmarks on the hillside
inside the thicket remained an empty cask, a remnant of my thick body
which has now become the shape of a log of wood rot
—then, no one could hear
the arguments and screams, only the echoes that reverberated through
the tree limbs and leaned against my inner ear becoming part
of the silhouetted tree line
outside along a small embankment next to the empty house where I
used to lie sideways with my head nearest the ground —where I watched
the soldier beetles carelessly roam below the swaying parabola
of slumping sunflowers, where a clump of sod imprints a lasting smudge
I return to the vacant house occasionally to stand on the embankment
still imprinting in my facial skin, transfusing —then I think of the room
now my body, a rooted rotted waste of immersing follicles
against my hairline weaving the forgotten voices and somnolent soil
not forgetting the line which is my forest that forever becomes
—the outskirts of my home
Notes:
“Kúghą /Home” appears in Ghostword (Gnashing Teeth Publishing, 2022) by Crisosto Apache and is reprinted here with the permission of Gnashing Teeth Publishing.
Source: Poetry (September 2022)