Amanda Gorman
Prompt for the Planet
By Amanda Gorman
The condor
The cuckoo
The crane
The flicker
The flycatcher
The falcon
The owl (spotted, gray, great)
The plover
The rail (black, clapper, light-footed) The Bald eagle
Almost all and only gust,
In their long walk of dust,
With just their God-given names crusted In the pounding temples of dunes.
Each a child with their own sanded
Language, a breach
-ing history, a web-footed mystery,
Winged and waiting
In the gut of the earth.
Swallowed seagulls shift in the sand,
Their bodies a flash of white rain,
Veined, ripe for the breath,
Caked with death.
The falling.
The floods
Unchecked,
Cigar flecks,
Cigar buds,
The black mandible buds inside
The throne of the tree stump, or
The tree’s palm,
The palm tree,
The palmed tree, we
The psalm, tree,
The calm tree, we
bomb trees
Those imports, extorted paradise;
A treescape
Of an escape
Scraped and sprung
Beside the ridged shapes of neighborhoods. We could be
Crouching, but proud, amidst the earth. Made of such brown, we would
-n’t be looking down
When we should be looking up:
At the song of the sea, she
Sculpted into a mirror for the face of a globe.
She, glass with a scar healed so tight it’s sea glass white, the long stretch of bright of a sunset in all its beckoning and blinding.
There’s a skinny black girl at the pier
Over here almost daring to fly,
Cuz she knows the ocean is both a graveyard And a spiritual dancing off the lip.
Every word a wound,
Every word a way,
She reaches amidst the crumbs of her pocket And fishes out beads of letters,
Cranes her neck at the flicker
Of the gull caught in flight, spotted, grey, great, Riding the rails of a bald wind,
Black, clapper, light-footed.
She tosses poetry in arcs above the water like seeds, Head thrown back, laughing hard
and waits.