Two Poems

Twig-Weaving

I was gone when the wind took the nest
gone when the broom handle fell 


gone when the circled twigs and mud
came down—this time gone, scattered 


across pavement, gone the life inside—
gone the egg came rolling, came cracking,


gone bird yoke spreading just like guilt


gone their little offering of home
gone the birds will try again


gone we will not stop their twig-weaving
gone their woven womb.


Always We Begin Again

Today you could wake up and say, It doesn’t have to be complicated
life, that is, in the way a forest overtakes the scourge of the machine.


Eventually, the scar will be covered first by high grasses and flowering
weeds, then shoulder high pines that spine their way to the leaf ceiling.


Life, you could say, could be like that. A regrowth, something 
the whole forest seems to agree upon, beginning the moment after 


the metal teeth carve a wound. Life could be like that, and love.
Love—the way years from now you will look down the path


the machine took and never know that once this was the way
the humans went, blistering their way, metal teeth dripping sap.

Aaron Brown

Aaron Brown is the author of the poetry collection Acacia Road, winner of the 2016 Gerald Cable Book Award (Silverfish Review Press, 2018) and of the memoir Less Than What You Once Were (Unsolicited Press, 2022). He has published work in Michigan Quarterly Review, Image, World Literature Today online, Waxwing, and Transition, among others, and he is a contributing editor for Windhover. Brown grew up in Chad and now lives in Texas, where he is an assistant professor of English and directs the writing center at LeTourneau University. He holds an MFA from the University of Maryland.

Website: aaronbrownwriter.com

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