Series editor’s note: What happens in the aftermath of a long, ravaging war? What happens to folks whose country is always at war with them? These are the poignant questions Jehan L. Roberson asks in her poem “Notes from the Field,” painting a rather grim picture of bodies singing and rotting in the streets. But this is not just about the aftermath, which also seems to overlap with the present; the poem goes back to the origins of this country, to question the constitution itself that refuses to hold all its people equally. And though there is fury and anger embedded in the tone of the poem, there is tenderness too, as that is a necessary balm in the aftermath. Here, the poem seems to say, we want courage, we want many things afforded to others, we want dignity and decency, the privilege to die from natural causes; here, the poem offers itself as a safe space for us to make our demands, for us to imagine a life in which our people were not constantly at war, constantly within war. Here, in this poem, be the aftermath; breathe, and bear witness, and help us build a country that can hold us. – Mahtem Shiferraw
Notes from the Field
by Jehan L. Roberson
In the aftermath, we cross
borders, sidewalks and
bridges, venture past
vacant buildings and neighborhoods
paying homage to a city
ever present,
no longer
here.
In the aftermath, only remnants
are found; cloaked fear sits atop
mountainous forms
of ash and sweat,
bones and tears. Bodies
sway and sing and rot
in the streets
blood runs
like honey thick
and slow
to the chorus of afternoon suns
the village is on fire
the village is on fire
we are on fire –
In the aftermath we search
for answers to questions
we ought not to ask
list demands, thrust them
like church flyers
into palms full
of longing
we want stars
in clouded skies
and full moons
we want courage
the end of regret
we want to feel
like we’re understood
we want the privilege to die
from natural causes
we want a stronger constitution
to hold us
give us constitution
so we can stomach
it all
we want all things
like that
we want them back,
those things
we never really had.