Aaron Poochigian
The Sanctuary
Not Atoms
When, strolling through the Village, I discover
one lonesome shoe, a jeweled but dogless collar,
the crushed rose of a hitman or a lover,
barf like an offering, a half-burnt dollar,
“Scream” masks holding traffic-light-top vigil,
loose lab rats among the morning glories
or Elmo trapped inside a witch’s sigil,
I love the universe because it’s made of stories.
Often what has happened or been done
around here cries out in assorted sirens.
This park, though, stands apart from those environs
for now: it wears the crime-scene shrine of one
whose skateboard didn’t get to take him home.
Here pooled the spray-paint tears of loving vandals.
And now, through crimson glass, a mass of candles
is multiplying pity in the gloam.
Aaron Poochigian
earned a PhD in Classics from the University of Minnesota and an MFA in Poetry from Columbia University. His latest poetry collection,
American Divine, the winner of the Richard Wilbur Award, came out in 2021. He has published numerous translations with Penguin Classics and W.W. Norton. His work has appeared in such publications as
Best American Poetry, The Paris Review, and
POETRY.