Those Who Give Birth to Goats
by Julia Kolchinsky Dasbach
Only one out of ten people born in a year of
the Goat finds happiness (十羊九不全) ~ Chinese folk
saying
Some would drown
theirs as soon as they
were born. Luck won’t come
with
age, they’d say,
and death in water
proved far easier
than milk. Some would
cut theirs out early
to change the animal
while others would stop
making love altogether
and wait for the goat
to pass. Give birth
under
the horse, they
urged,
in its calla lily mouth
and mane of jasmine,
in brackish yellow heat.
A
goat, they said, is raised
for
nothing more
than
slaughter, an arid
field
of withered primrose.
But his heart
is nothing
like the sound
of goat or horse hooves.
Between breathing
and drowning, he listens,
silver and quiet, balanced
on the ribs
like on the ancient frame
of an unbuilt house.
* * * * *
"Those Who Give Birth to
Goats" was previously published in Midway
Journal.
Julia
Kolchinsky Dasbach emigrated from Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine as a Jewish refugee
when she was six years old. She holds an MFA in Poetry from the University of
Oregon and is a Ph.D. candidate in Comparative Literature at the University of
Pennsylvania, where her research focuses on contemporary American poetry about
the Holocaust. Julia is the author of The Bear Who Ate the Stars (Split Lip Press, 2014) and her recent
poems appear in Best New Poets, American Poetry
Review, and Nashville Review, among others. She is also
Editor-in-Chief of Construction Magazine (www.constructionlitmag.com)
and when not busy chasing her toddler around the playgrounds of Philadelphia,
she writes a blog about motherhood (https://otherwomendonttellyou.wordpress.com/).
No comments:
Post a Comment