For July, we bring you a timely new poem by Luisa A. Igloria, rich with the imagery of abundance, to highlight the quiet solitude of the laborers and immigrants who work behind the scenes to allow for these riches others enjoyed.
-- Karissa Chen, Fiction & Poetry Editor
Invisibles
“Ten thousand joys, ten thousand sorrows— which are more beautiful…”
~ Nic Sebastian
During the Great Depression, the countryside
was full of them—
stooped over rows of asparagus,
garlic, strawberries; elbow-deep in salmon
guts and scales that silvered conveyor belts,
carpeted the canning factory floor.
Every so often a hand—
maybe a finger— nicked by blades:
for industry is virtue and the harvest
of these great dreams,
warmed by the sun
and striped fat with flavor, must be gleaned.
Pasteurized, purchased, they leap
from farm
and river to waiting tables
so in iconic paintings,
rosy-cheeked children can bow
their heads in prayer
over clean porcelain and heavy silverware,
while elders pass lakes of mashed potato
and the bronzed carcass of a bird from hand
to hand.
In greasy spoon diners and fast
food places across town, look closely
at the face of the lonely
busboy wiping down
the oily counter, at the waitress who’s just
learned English, balancing
a pot of coffee and a tray
of dirty dishes in her hands.
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