Reverse: A Lynching



Ansel Elkins

Return the tree, the moon, the naked man
Hanging from the indifferent branch
Return blood to his brain, breath to his heart
Reunite the neck with the bridge of his body
Untie the knot, undo the noose
Return the kicking feet to ground
Unwhisper the word jesus
Rejoin his penis with his loins
Resheathe the knife
Regird the calfskin belt through trouser loops
Refasten the brass buckle
Untangle the spitting men from the mob
Unsay the word nigger
Release the firer’s finger from its trigger
Return the revolver to its quiet holster
Return the man to his home
Unwidow his wife
Unbreak the window
Unkiss the crucifix of her necklace
Unsay Hide the children in the back, his last words
Repeal the wild bell of his heart
Reseat his family at the table over supper
Relace their fingers in prayer, unbless the bread
Rescind the savagery of men
Return them from animal to human, reborn in the long run
Backward to the purring pickup
Reignite the Ford’s engine, its burning headlights
Retreat down the dirt road, tires speeding
Backward into rising dust
Backward past cornfields, past the night floating moths
Rescind the whiskey from the guts
Unswallowed, unswigged, the tongue unstung
Rehouse the flask in the field coat’s interior pocket
Unbare the teeth, unwhet the appetite
Return the howl to its wolf
Return the shovel to the barn, the rope to the horse’s stable
Resurrect the dark from its heart housed in terror

Reenter the night through its door of mercy

This poem was one of the winners of the 2011 “Discovery” Poetry Contest.


Post this page to: del.icio.us Yahoo! MyWeb Digg reddit Furl Blinklist Spurl

Comments

1 |
Excellent poem
I love the imagery of reversing and undoing, and the rhythm of this poem just takes you there. Thank you! I'm not a big poetry person, but this one gave me chills and inspires me to read it aloud.
— posted 06/06/2011 at 00:21 by Sheri
2 |
Hugely excellent poem
I am a big poetry person. I read a lot of poetry, and have since
I was a child. Still, this is the first new poem I've read in years
that made my eyes sting with tears. Congratulations to the
poet, and congratulations to the judges who named it a
winner.

Reading this poem is the best thing I've done this entire day.
Maybe this month.
— posted 06/06/2011 at 01:43 by Robert
3 |
unpeircing the sting (a tiny bit) of our country's history
To Ansel Elkins: Thank you for sharing your gift of language and imagery. A close friend shared this with me tonight.

Painfully Beautiful is one way to describe this work!
— posted 06/06/2011 at 03:00 by Kamaria
4 |
powerful art
a powerful poem that beautifully captures the trauma and brutality of systemic oppression, rewinding its literary thread through the minotaur's lair of our racist history.

thank you!

Drew Dellinger
www.planetizethemovement.org
— posted 06/06/2011 at 03:56 by Drew Dellinger
5 |
yes
such a beautiful and powerful way to illuminate the complexity of this subject. I hope the longing this engenders could fuel the kind of change necessary to prevent these types of actions in the future. the poem is finding its way into discourse as a helpful way to discuss repercussions of decisions being debated and made in relation to human rights. thank you
— posted 06/06/2011 at 13:48 by Caryn
6 |
wonderful.

chegadessaudade.blogspot.com
— posted 07/22/2011 at 14:28 by Andressa
7 |
thought provoking.
Great poem. Most poetry passes through me, soon forgotten, but this poem will stay with me.
— posted 08/01/2011 at 23:08 by Kait
8 |
Awesome!
— posted 02/11/2012 at 23:51 by judy toomey
9 |
What an image filled read, a music video in my head. I read all four winners submissions and this is the best by far.
— posted 03/23/2012 at 07:02 by Tony
10 |
Yeatsian echo
The "indifferent beak."
— posted 03/27/2012 at 06:44 by Tristan Saldana
Name
E-mail (Will not appear online)
Title
Comment
To prevent automated Bots from spamming, please enter the text you see in the image below in the appropriate input box. Your comment will only be submitted if the strings match. Please ensure that your browser supports and accepts cookies, or your comment cannot be verified correctly.



Powered by Comment Script
del.ici.ous  stumbleUpon  Reddit  Facebook    Digg   RSS Feed Icon

About the Author

Ansel Elkins’s poems appear or are forthcoming in The American Scholar, Mississippi Review, Ninth Letter, and The Southern Review.

The 2011 “Discovery” Poetry Contest.

The 2010 “Discovery” Poetry Contest.


http://www.facebookloginhut.com/facebook-login/  http://www.facebookloginhut.com/facebook-login/ http://www.facebookloginhut.com/facebook-login/ 



Boston Review Newsletter