Hannah Keziah Agustin
Poetry
Hannah Keziah Agustin is from Manila, Philippines, and resides in New York City. Her work is found and forthcoming in Poetry Northwest, Michigan Quarterly Review, Guernica, and elsewhere.
Wisconsin, Summer
It’s July. I’m floating belly up
on Devil’s Lake when two fighter
jets fly overhead, tearing the blue
heaven open. On the shore, independence
dazes the little children, blue and red
and white glow sticks cuff their wrists,
star-spangled faces freckled for war.
A boy asks his mom if it’s America's
birthday. And I want to tell him, child,
listen to the violins and the artillery,
the cello and echo of gunshots at once.
Inhale the dusk, the gunpowder, the gust
of weed from drunk white boys singing
the national anthem next to the cops,
teenagers not yet bodied by violence.
Revel with me at the north star, at the fire
-works, at the simple American joy of
blowing things up, as they did back home
in the Philippines from 1899 to 1902 to
beyond. Celebrate with me this freedom
as sweet as milk and honey, as a lozenge
on my tongue in the shape of a promise
-d land. I want to tell him this was the life
I asked for and I have nothing. Jesus, I
have nothing but the names of the birds
in Wisconsin—a blackbird, a thrush,
a cardinal. I saw one dead on the asphalt
with no clear injury. Its red body burned
with a former life, and I wished not to
face its destiny. When I carried its lifeless
frame to the grass, I wanted nothing
for that poor thing, nothing but mercy.