42opus

is an online magazine of the literary arts.

2 December 2004 | Vol. 4, No. 4

Of Foreign Lands and People

The day my brother brought me to the pond

of one thousand screaming white swans


it was winter in Akita. I'd spent the morning

trading picture-words on napkins


with the lacquer-box maker and his tiny wife

who took scissors to delicate paper, conjuring


moonscapes and improbable blossoms.

We understood each other perfectly


approximately five percent of the time.

And then this calculus of swans: a nightmare


of beauty gone carnival: so many swans,

so much passionate


squawking and wanting

and so little pond.


I stood among them, blue-lipped and dumb

as the snow fell around me, watching as my usually stone-


gruff brother suddenly began

honking back—softly at first, then


louder and louder, matching them squawk

for tremulous squawk, his thin frame arcing


like a crane's to meet their yellow beaks

inches from his hooded face. The collective chorus


was gorgeous and terrifying as any

one could ever hope for


but I knew not how to answer—I had not even

paltry breadcrumbs—I knew not how to feed


or speak to a single bird of them.

About the author:

Barbara Yien lives in San Francisco. Her work has been published in the Raven Chronicles and is forthcoming in MARGIE: The American Journal of Poetry.

Source:

http://42opus.com/v4n4/offoreignlandsandpeople

42opus is an online magazine of the literary arts.

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