Shelter in Poems with Erin Belieu, Poems for Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month, Poetry Coalition Fellowship, and more

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May 26, 2020


As for the Heart


Erin Belieu

I am come to the age  
of pondering my lastness:  
buying what seems likely  
my final winter coat at Macy’s,  
or when a glossy magazine 
(so very blithely)  
asks me to renew. As for  

my heart, that pixilated  
tweener, how long  
I’ve been required to baby  
her complaints,  
(unLOVED unLOVED),  

alarmed and stubborn clock, 
refusing to listen even as  
the more intrepid tried.  

Now, she mostly mutters 
to herself, though  
occasionally there’s  
some clanging, a tinny sound,  
like the radiator in a Southie  
triple decker, fractious as  
a pair of cowboy boots 
in a laundromat’s dryer.  

It’s always been  
this joke old people know— 
in such a state  
of nearly doneness,  
the world grows sweeter,  
as if our later days  
are underscored with music  
from a concerto’s saddest  
oboe hidden in the trees. 

Just today,  
while standing in the kitchen,  
my son complained nonstop  
about his AP Psych class  
while wolfing warmed up  
bucatini from a crazed,  
pink china bowl.  

Shiny, kvetching creature.  
Even if I could tell him  
what he doesn’t want to know,  
I wouldn’t. But now,  

the pissy storm that’s spent  
all afternoon flapping like 
a dirty sheet  
has wandered off 
to spook some other  
neighborhood. 

There’s one barbed weed 
pushing up greenly through  
my scruffy loropetalum. 

And it falls on me, this little  
cold rain the day has left. 

Copyright © 2020 by Erin Belieu. Originally published with the Shelter in Poems initiative on poets.org.


“Because I haven’t (yet) lost family or friends to the virus, and because I’m lucky to have the kind of work that allows me to stay safe inside my little bubble, I’ve been able to feel the especial tenderness of everyone and everything around me at the moment. And no doubt my son heading off to college soon has put me in mind of endings. It’s been an unintentional gift from the universe, sheltering with him, having this concentrated time together before he goes off into the world soon.”
Erin Belieu

Erin Belieu’s most recent collection is Slant Six (Copper Canyon Press, 2014). Her book, Come-Hither Honeycomb, is forthcoming from Copper Canyon Press in February, 2021. She lives in Houston, Texas.

Poems for Asian/Pacific Heritage Month


Celebrate and honor Asian/Pacific Heritage Month by getting to know these voices from Poets.org:

Ideology” by Aria Aber
[An ancient pond!]” by Matsuo Basho
So Chinese Girl” by Dorothy Chan
I Invite My Parents to a Dinner Party” by Chen Chen 
How I Got That Name” by Marilyn Chin 
Poem Full of Worry Ending with My Birth” by Tarfia Faizullah
Drifting Flowers of the Sea” by Sadakichi Hartmann 
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Glacier (after Wallace Stevens)”                                    by Craig Santos Perez
The Iraqi Nights” by Dunya Mikhail 
Why Whales Are Back in New York City” by Rajiv Mohabir
Dear Exile,” by Mai Der Vang

Poetry Coalition Fellowships 

The Poetry Coalition is pleased to launch a new paid fellowship program with inaugural host organizations CantoMundo, Cave Canem, Kundiman, Mizna, and Split This Rock. Apply for the 2020 Poetry Coalition Fellowships by July 15.

Watch Mahogany L. Browne read “Black Girl Magic” as part of the
Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation’s Read By series of poetry films.

Artist Relief 

As we continue to work on #ArtistRelief in collaboration with six other national organizations, raising funds for poets, writers, and artists experiencing financial hardship due to Covid-19, we invite you to learn more at artistrelief.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook

May Guest Editor: Monica Youn

Thanks to Monica Youn, author of Blackacre (Graywolf Press, 2016), winner of the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America, who curated Poem-a-Day for this month. 

Last Week’s Poem-a-Day  


Revisit last week’s Poem-a-Day selections with us on Poets.org:

May 17: “An Indian Love Song” by Bertrand N. O. Walker 
May 18: “A Painter’s Thoughts” by John Yau 
May 19: From “Giornata: On Faith” by Gregory Pardlo
May 20: “Hangul Abecedarian” by Franny Choi
May 21: “The Ruins of Bam” by Garous Abdolmalekian, translated by Idra Novey and Ahmad Nadalizadeh
May 22: “ars pasifika” by Craig Santos Perez
May 23: “Twilight” by Lucretia Maria Davidson 

COVID-19 Resources

Visit our COVID-19 page on poets.org, a roundup of websites that provide information about emergency funding and other resources for artists and arts organizations.

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