Community Anthologies: 2024, On Queer Family
Virginia, Annie
By Annie Virginia

she/her

in order to separate or purify & other poems

Poetry

“but too you ran scissors / up and down the powerlines / so the calls never made sense  /until the static of ashes proved / my mother right”

Editorial note: the first poem below, “in order to separate or purify,” is best read on a desktop screen due to formatting of the poem.

in order to separate or purify

for MNC (November 12, 1991-May 28, 2016)

A cremation chamber is also known as a retort. A retort: a “repayment of insult or injury.” To retort: “to answer” and “to heat in order to separate or purify.” From Latin retorque: twist back. 

a milkwhite statue of two sylphs draped 
around an orb of light 
their faces on either side of it echoes
light’s own children
one girl is a dream of Alphonse Mucha’s 
in the globe she envisions a theater 
where everyone’s face is like hers licked with elixir 
her hands around the light like she was born a painting
this scene and lantern fish
are how they know God exists
and this is the only place in the South they can say so
                       the other girl more shadow and future
                       will spend the rest of her life looking
                       and trying to write the play 
                       in which both girls live
                       but she will never look again 
                       like this or like the sprite 
                                        in her mother’s room there has always been a lamp 
                                        with a woman all in black dancing 
                                        beside a huge mosaic moon 
                                        maybe there is a song of this or maybe her mother
                                        just made it seem so 
if that is a black-eyed susan behind her ear
this and the lamp are too how she will believe in God
when on the other side of the light there is no one

i first saw you in a dusk-slow purple
storm clouds over a cemetery at night
where we’d sit all June humming
and i ate only plums that summer
their insides the orange of lightning’s borders

we rubbed rosemary between our fingers every day
because it grew there 
and not at home 
and we sutured that scent to Salem 

you wore a poison ring with milk inside it 
and sometimes let me drink
                       witched and winterlit 
                       something of moonshine long-buried under snow
but too you ran scissors 
up and down the powerlines 
so the calls never made sense 
until the static of ashes proved  
my mother right  
that i waited for spilled milk on live wire all along

a vein stems up a child’s leg
and i think it strange that children have veins
too small                   to be made of blood something so practical
when did you even grow old enough to have veins? 
                                        to need anything inside of you but milk and song

it has been years now since i was younger than you

the first time i visited your home
your mother had just made cookies
it was so normal 
except that it was the middle of the night
but no one noticed
she was kind and asked questions
and didn’t let us sleep in the same bed
she must not have known i didn’t know
how to touch you anyway

your mother so normal
except that you smoked cigarettes together 
you your best friends and your mother
dresses leaning over porch railings
all breathing smoke
and tasting ash

i’ve heard it feels like being in a womb 
seconds after needle slips inside vein
wrapped in a warm calm
so tied to sleep or drowning 
that at the end it doesn’t matter
if you wake or are born or sink

It takes 2 to 2.5 hours to cremate a body.

                                                                            you lived for twenty-four years six months and sixteen days

The ashes will weigh approximately 4 pounds.
                                                                            when i see snow now
                                                                             it is impossible not to see your body 

Ashes misnamed: pulverized fragments of bones.
                                                                             i would’ve told you 
                                                                             i would’ve told you 
                                                                             i cannot put them in milk and salvage them now 

Nothing organic remains, only a thimble of salts and minerals.

Bodily fluids a mist from the crematorium exhaust. 
                                                                            it is true what they said in science class
                                                                            we are all breathing you always 

Like fingerprints, ashes are individual. 

                                                                            snowflakes then
                                                                            maybe a white reflection of ash

Family can watch the process through a window. 
                                                                            it is not like watching milk boil 
                                                                            it is not like watching snow

when your mother went through your shoes
were the songs you strung like warning
playing in your room? did she end up cradling 
your moccasins’ rubber and leather
far into the Shelby night 
where if music isn’t playing 
it’s so country quiet you can feel the stars in your ears? 
like inside the shoes she might feel 
an unashed footbone
did she talk to you that night?
her rhythm cut with odd pauses
all night a near-whisper
like a man cleaning his rifle at daybreak
and talking to himself¹
like saying it now 
might reach an unashed ear

                                         there were whole nights full of water
                                         when we swam naked
                                         we were pearls in the lake
                                         white marble drops of calcium sinking in loops
                                         our bones milk’s solid sister
                                         our bones a small story about life that doesn’t end 

                       i dream i am sometime when you are alive 
                       i jump in a lake and you are nowhere to be found 
                                         i lie alone on the shore and you are now here to be found
                                         grit and smoke and every story 
                      all i need is the earth
                      to buzz like it did when you were breathing 

your ashes exactly moon-gray
as if a hunk of moon had fallen to earth 
been woman
and broken into ashes 
a tablespoon of spacedust
i keep in a pink plastic film canister 
on a shelf in my room

there should be a liquid version of cremation 
bone turned to milk 
so it can be swallowed
kept in a poison ring
injected in the veins

unhook yourself from this elegy 
where there are needles 
you could step on
the darkness is clear water
alight with lantern fish

 


1 Ocean Vuong.

As Above So Below

remember me late night 
my back to the cemetery grass
giving stars the names of tombstones
and divining the stories of their encounters–

                       these two are feuding siblings 
                       slinging coffee over their parents’ will, 
                       these three are lovers sending tiny sailboats 
                       between each others’ homes on the creek.

                                              (Just so I could hear you listen to me. (Every invention is true.)) 

don’t forget the outfits I put on 
my memories of myself as a child, the stories 
of you as a child, how I added stripes and color, 
how our families’ old photos blushed.

when I am far from stars, remember 
the white of my teeth in the graveyard’s natal dark, 
how I always danced in your company, how I learned 
my best name from something you called me in the evening.

remind me of figs. how we swore when we bit into them
we heard the ghosts rustle toward their sweet bellies,  
lore of a time when fruit could be held.


Edited by Isaiah Yonah Back-Gaal.
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