LUCENT

What would we seem, stripped down

Like a wintered tree.

Glossy scabs, tight-raised skin,

These can look silver in certain moonlights.

In other words,

Our scars are the brightest

Parts of us.


The crescent moon,

The night’s lucent lesion.

We are felled oaks beneath it,

Branches full of empty.

Look closer.

What we share is more

Than what we’ve shed.


& what we share is the bark, the bones.

Paleontologists, from one fossilized femur,

Can dream up a species,

Make believe a body

Where there was none.

Our remnants are revelation,

Our requiem as raptus.

When we bend into dirt

We’re truth preserved

Without our skin.


Lumen means both the cavity

Of an organ, literally an opening,

& a unit of luminous flux,

Literally, a measurement of how lit

The source is. Illuminate us.

That is, we, too,

Are this bodied unit of flare,

The gap for lux to breach.


Sorry, must’ve been the light

Playing tricks on us, we say,

Knuckling our eyelids.

But perhaps it is we who make

Falsities of luminescence—

Our shadows playing tricks on stars.

Every time their gazes tug down,

They think us monsters, then men,

Predators, then persons again,

Beasts, then beings,

Horrors & then humans.

Of all the stars the most beautiful

Is nothing more than a monster,

Just as starved & stranded as we are.