Self-Portrait as Winged Victory of Samothrace (after Tarfia Faizullah)

Vivien Song

previously published in Waxwing Magazine

Lately, I have been searching 

             for bodies that    swell        pregnant 

                          with brine. In the Louvre, 

                   I touch marble 

blistering on doorways: one unending gaze 

                                      flung against history's frame. Small 

             disasters. How long before I    find the remains 

      of cities I cast

                                  into grief?      Only netting 

                           in my hands, too quickly stitched   to

 stillness.   I have seen the dream              where I stand 

                                                    atop a ship's hull—

        what it is to play 

           the captain of a flooded land,     harpooning 

the faces of grandparents I have

                                                                 never met. Around me, 

                                                   statues bronzed 

                                 by foreign hands. For eight years, 

I busied myself in the endless 

                 walkways of the West, each exhibit    crashing 

       into the next,    learned to         forget the aching 

                                                                     of these salt-struck 

wings. 

                             In a different country,         I do not drown 

    myself       in the sea's embrace.        My   name 

                 hurled     to the wind.                         An anchor caught 

on this broken hull, obliterated by light.              See how the tides 

            erode            each unspectacular 

                                                           victory, how I always    

return      to  fistfuls of foam.