Mary Simmons

Poetry

Mary Simmons is a queer writer from Cleveland, Ohio. She earned her poetry MFA from Bowling Green State University, where she also served as the managing editor for Mid-American Review. She has work in or forthcoming from trampset, Moon City Review, One Art, Beaver Magazine, Yalobusha Review, and others.

 

Trespass

When we’re gone, there’ll be wheat, and it still ambers every fall, and it dies, and stubbles again through the earth. And it won’t have meant much of anything. And there’ll be a pang in the cavity of a cumulonimbus, and that will be all. Blackbirds drag circles in dust, footprint tapestries of meadow, and heat hangs low over the milkweed. Coyotes howl all night. No, not howl, cry. They cry until their lungs ache, and then they sleep in the clearing, and the grass dews, and the fog breaks. And it won’t have meant anything more than a smooth, white pebble in the face of sandstone. And the only trace will be pine needles scattered across the path, sinking into the mud. It’s raining, and the crows are little scorched things, burnt all the way through. This is what home means when home is a sunspot waving over the field. When we’re gone, we’ll love more. We’ll have more to lose.

For about three nights in September, I was kept awake at night by the howling of coyotes. It was loud, and close, and forced me to spend time with my thoughts, alone in the dark. I wrote ‘Trespass’ as a way of exploring nature without the human, which, innately, makes it an exploration of what it means to be human, to exist, to have awareness of one’s own temporary nature.

Listen: