THE DISTANCE BETWEEN FIRE AND STONE
I've never told the truth
about anything: not that
I've often found the defiance
of forest fires more stunning
than the pre-planned blooms
of fireworks, not the night I caught
my friend cutting her mom's pills
in half in the dark. I've tried
to accept that the lesson learned
from a plane barreling into a pentagon
is that fire will always only ever
come close to ravishing stone,
but the truth is, I still don't entirely
understand the expanse between
stacks of planks of acres of trees
and the stacks of paper they become,
small bits of which Fermi let drift
from his fingers during the detonation
of the first atomic bomb. The truth is,
across each narrow road two oceans
from here, men speak to each other
most honestly with their car horns.
Tarfia Faizullah is a Bangladeshi-American poet. The chosen poem is from her collection Registers of Illuminated Villages published in March 2018.
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