Shyanne Bennett
Florence Upon Arrival in Colón
Meh wicked mother bruk meh
outta school fi wipe pickney mouth.
Care fa meh sister’s baby
likkle ting still suckling tit.
No, dem nah teach me to read.
Just teach me to cook cow foot.
Meh iron till meh hand tuff
even iron bed topcoat.
All day meh up in bush,
grow yuca and punkin.
Tun up ground till da sun a burn meh
All of dat when meh only seven yuh see.
All a dem meh leave.
Dem bare face skin up dem teeth.
Meh want nutin’ meh leave.
Dem can dash away!
In a Night, Great-Grandmother Florence Turns My Tongue a Burnt Parchment
Our bent broken
sable hails, the knead in.
There was is so many
worn-in sallow wombs
toil-kindled mouths. We
become landscape
A vessel surrendered. A
metamorphosizing
crescent. Fresh wombs
we know old. This whole
forgotten/ this our
sand shorn woven.
The Second Night, Florence Turns My Tongue a Flaming Bush
Aaa aannnnnn guish.
Anger. Aroma
drenched cloth
for saintly tautologies.
Candle-piqued reveries
toward pyroclastic
possibilities. Ink-bitten
invocations are our
holy interventions.
The third night, Florence turns my ear a glowing coal
Of fragrant groans
or fragment moans.
Here me red calling
sorrow flapping
swallow’s rapping.
You rattling corpse me
in hook-snatch
thank blues
Shyanne Figueroa Bennett is a Brooklyn poet with roots in Panama, Jamaica, and Puerto Rico. Her work is published or forthcoming in Green Mountains Review, Oversound, The Acentos Review, and The New York Quarterly, among other places. She graduated with an MFA in Writing from Columbia University, where she also received a Chair’s Fellowship and a Creative Writing Teaching Fellowship.