By Prosper C. Ìféányí
they are amputating the heads
of small trees & putting them
in small polythene bags. a truck
comes to get them at night
because that is the
best season for anomy. i see
men working in oil fields
or serving in the army—
chest propped into small coffins
& unanimated dolls. they
voyage the bottom sea with these
many heads in guise of trout
fishing; if the sea wasn't
so half-asleep, it would have
gifted them a home in the wrapping
of a blustery wind. the sun comes
clean to the window skeined
by the willow tree. sunstroke
ensconced on the eye of beholder.
dogs paddling in circles
for the return of their masters
the sea brings them home
in little gulps: boots first,
axe, then gunpowder, smoke pipes
bottleneck guitars, & blue sacks
of bodies. & they say
nature doesn't fight for its own.
Prosper C. Ìféányí writes from Nigeria. His works are featured or forthcoming in The Offing, The Westchester Review, Black Warrior Review, Salt Hill, Magma Poetry, The Fourth River, New Note Poetry Anthology, and elsewhere. His debut micro-chapbook, Sermon (Ghost City Press), appears in 2023. He has a B.A in English and Literary Studies from Delta State University.