Tag Archives: Kenyon Review

TOBI KASSIM.November 2024


TOBI KASSIM

Photo by Jeff Sirkin


 

INTERIOR RUN OVER CUPS

Don’t forget to love why

you’re here. What brought you here

Lithe contours of the unknown,

faint ever presence of the previous

flume forever listing back to the dock.

Some arrivals we never have a shape for

just suggestions that this outline was intended

to waver, to redirect visible streams

we float on toward reasons, which remain

unjustified. Wanting to be anywhere takes

bitten shapes in being there.

Sharp light touches where it hadn’t

reached in you before. How come

I feel like I knew you.

Your voice has unbelonging

like the earliest days of my wandering

for what to call memories. Guide me home

where I’ve never been. I remember that trail

always dissipated but picked back up

right before it became a loop.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

ORCHARD STREET

Hold steady, New Haven city, wobble your music

around my hiding places, trap music

rides the Doppler effect through tinted

windows, slurred over my walk beyond the gates

of downtown to my side of town. Past the school

bell’s earshot I can attend

the overtones in slow air beyond the perimeter

of sound around study. How come we can’t hear

the carillon out by the Dixwell house?

There’s no sound curtain where sirens fade

into slow harmonics. Reentry breaks like glass

instead. Thank god these outer streets fill up

on their own music. I love when the oldhead

Cadillacs pass blasting “Family Affair.” Playing

“What’s Goin’ On.” Because the city carries

old patterns in concealed cases. The sound

is a watery border, flocking seagulls to empty

parking lots at midday. Common birds blend in

with bare trees outside my window, their hisses branch

around a single pitch. I realize the problem with this

life is that I can’t pinpoint a moment when I chose it.

I said I didn’t have to leave, so I stayed.

I splintered inside it while its mechanism

marked me absent. New Haven equivocates

a dividing line inside itself. The bells articulate

bands of belonging. There is a man on the curb

screaming you give love a bad name a bad name

repeatedly through his whole chest. Not quite singing

but sharper to extract us. His discontent is available

right below the eyeline of the tower.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

DISTAL FIELD

Is it my desire

for revelation

of an agent

behind these acts?

must be

the murmur of an

atmospheric

river washed me ashore

heart jettisoned from

within my mother’s

blood weather, my

abandon–always sliding

into view behind an impasse

like family. particulate

dispersed through

such interference

that my voice precedes

my apparition as

blossoms in the field

before spring

home is everything

i wish to remain three-

dimensional upon

close inspection. weather

is my prospective

love out there

verifying the distances

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

THE ALIEN/NATION/BODY TAKES A LONG WAY HOME

Shade behind the high walls

of the high-voltage compound, the nation in me

is occupied with unseen workings. What’s behind

its walls keeps me lit up

in my apartment. Uncertain if the walls

are charged to keep me out or in. The body silhouette

electrocuted on the warning sticker

got caught in the not-knowing. All night

a stadium light blares in my open window and I know

where it’s made, but can’t say

what it found in the dream.

The alien studies broken glass for a trace

of a tradition these shards celebrate, ecstatic

holes in the sky. the body is scattered on sidewalk

and straggle grass, nostalgic

to eat something good for five

dollars, like when that was possible– and it was

hot too. Too much to ask; these days I have

hooptie dreams, rattling down

uneven pavement, the nationbody framed

in a system of slipped loops, alienation

an accrual of collisions with love

and other omens. Close to the end

of the city where togetherness twists

into a metal fence. It’s just

a plus sign left on the signage, no names

left inside the hearts carved on the poles.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

DREAM PARALYSIS

Some nights I step over the sleeping bodies of my parents

to turn off the steady drip of network news into their ears.

Then I climb the stairs and their voices river behind me.

Since I was a kid they’d recount their dreams

 

to each other in half-sleep. A murmur under my life gets louder at late hours

a long prayer over omens. They understand

each other’s metaphors. Fear braids their symbols to the same loom

and I wake up in the tapestry sometimes.

I was in the other room when a voice spoke

clearly– I was so angry I lost control of it in my body

 

The vents hid little chutes back to childhood, I sighed like I understood like there was

comfort in understanding

 

But the testimony is cloudy. . . what dream

 

fastened my legs under that table? To listen

I pinned my ears flat

against my skull for their dreams to run over the banks of the river

I heard my voice return sharply from the far shore

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

STITCH AND DRILL BIT

 

After Mauro Pech’s Doña Mina y Don Sam

 

Yes the smell of blood rises to mind, the mineral edge of a body

of water. Salt pulverized off rocks into the tender

shroud of the fog. The taste of salt scratched off

cheek, off canker, salt blister. Thought against

the back of my teeth. No doubt I held

beach rock in the scoop of my gullet to sharpen my silent

childhood toward speech. I knew there were green and red veins

threaded through the core of a hard family. I felt

sediment break off where my bloodlines disappeared

into the village. I followed the grain of oral history’s

map. Traced relation against the vanish-thin layers between

flesh and nature. We left for a stone called America and shook

our heads as we passed its grain from hand to hand between

us. The red knot I found at its heart for the oldest

ancestor. Our name anchored in the friable house

chipping under our grip. Someone perforated the slate to let air

into an ancient secret. My uncle came first to drive a tonguetip

deep enough to fasten our dispersal to a pattern, a shape to the stoneheart.

Left before I appeared. Stone is a weight for remembering

why I appeared. The cross-section is evidence that blood

moves backward too. I broke the slate to divide an offering,

warm breath rose in the gap like we just cut a fresh loaf open.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

ORCHARD STREET

This bramble

I’m bound up in

has borne fruit.

Backyard over

taken by cycles

of planning

then neglect.

Gourd vine planted

long before me

has taken strong

holds along the fences,

permits sparse

light between

its leaves and

lives on it in

shade of houses,

despite weeds

blotting out the blighted

ground where its

doubled lines

disguise their origin

in memory.

No one can

detangle how

to uproot what never

started: an unplanted

life woven for years

in the dark

perimeter of

what I attempted

to cultivate;

a lack of purpose

prolific in the interior.

Garden box wilds

through the winter.

Survival’s grip

buckles the fence

trellis. Long

vine I didn’t tend to

knotted all around me,

dropped fruit after

four fallow years.

Not the fleshless squash

I expected, not choke

cherries but hard

won bunches of grapes

softening for the birds

to suckle. I saw

daylight a few inches

above the fences

I was penned in.

 

 

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TOBI KASSIM


Tobi Kassim
was born in Ibadan, Nigeria, and has lived in the United States since 2003. His poems have been published or are forthcoming in the Volta, The Brooklyn Review, Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day, The Kenyon Review, Zocalo Public Square, Four Way Review and elsewhere. His chapbook, Dear Sly Stone, was published by Spiral Editions. He was a 2021 Undocupoets fellow, received a Katharine Bakeless Nason Scholarship from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, and he is an associate poetry editor for West Branch.

 

 

To download a printable PDF version of this page, click here.

 

 

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November 2024.TOBI KASSIM