Poetry by Joanna Deng
you said you were a disease, so
you ate the oranges we
laced into your veins
on that rotting mattress
with its pudding pulled
your flesh-etched eyes macerated above
the makeshift hospital gown
we cut from a linen sheet.
you told me once that you hated goodbyes
because they were like periods,
and you preferred commas,
run-ons,
nine lives,
no, ten,
as you kept hold of the rain in February
and those rinds rotting on your window sill
again
again,
again ,
you tried to beat light into your eyes
until there was nowhere left for it to bend because
there is no comma,
if there’s no more sentence
[ . ] so let us bag each other in clotted crimson
and pump each other’s hearts drunk with hope
my dear
as I peel you another clementine.
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I’ve never read anything like it before. It sounds very raw, and I love it for that.
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I really enjoyed how visceral the emotions I felt after reading this were. The images are so vivid and distinctive.
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Your use of imagery is so vivid and evokes such powerful, visceral emotion. I very much enjoyed reading this.
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