Sound Now
Vincent Hostak
February 1, 2021
America, January 6, 2021
It’s a moment that calls for more than prayer
when the posture of the supplicant is no remedy.
It may clear my wits for what is next
only while the white-hot minds of supremacists
burn now as much as they’re allowed.
It looks too much like mine as I hibernate.
Arms and legs attached already move,
they gain the ground as they’re allowed
to ease across the passive barriers
we dreamed alone would hold.
I would love to believe in the long arc of justice alone.
This might quiet the squall so in the cabin I can sleep.
But it’s only a hatch board that slows the flood,
shields my eyes from the drowning on the lower deck.
As much, it dulls my witness—still the hull will burst.
Hate metastasizes quicker than such a cure can catch.
I cannot wait for history to make me blamed or blameless.
Sleeping passions turn out nothing but old songs.
Lives whole, just, even well-remembered, sound now.
Vincent Hostak is a poet, essayist, and advocate. Long a resident of Texas, he resides in the intersection of city and wilderness near Denver. His poetry is published in Sonder Midwest (#5), Tejascovido.com, the Langdon Review of the Arts in Texas, and Wild, Abandoned (the blog). His podcast on refugee resettlement & culture: https://anchor.fm/crossingsrefugees.