July 2020 Poetry Feature: Steven Leyva and Elizabeth Scanlon

New poems by STEVEN LEYVA and ELIZABETH SCANLON

Table of contents: 

Steven Leyva

  • Ear Hustle
  • Gorgoneion: Ft Worth

Elizabeth Scanlon

  • This Thing

 

Ear Hustle
By Steven Leyva

Get down to the smallest birthright
I cannot claim: say beignets
and doesn’t the stutter of hot oil start
to sizzle the small plates of memory?

Faces powdered with sugar, no thought
to whose ancestors cut which cane, sing
a hymn of “mmm, mmm, mmm.”
Jackson square hangs its portraits

on the iron gates. And who can hold a horn
note as long as the midday sun? Look up
from that small plate and café
au lait, and see the bent levees

of language I cannot break. I will shame
every shibboleth. And every house is lifted
like a paused rapture. This cruelty and more
fries the Godhead in lard. Pour me a cup

of chicory. A saxophone player cuts a canal
through the breakfast din, playing Tank
and the Bangas I gotta make a quick decision
about how often I can be rescued.

Neither I nor my children will ever ride
the roller coasters at Jazzland
where a sign still hangs as it does in the heavens:
will open after storm.

 

Gorgoneion: Ft Worth
By Steven Leyva

From the snake-haired interstate
exit ramps, the city throws its stone
heart. Burnt grass cleaves the clay
embedded lawns, as sprinklers rise at 3 am
dreaming the nymphs of insects: none
bigger than the dragonfly that flits
like the flint of an arrowhead that can’t choose
whom to kill. My mother will retire here and live

through two botched hip replacements. There are stones
where her joints should be. She drives a big body
SUV to floss these split tongues of concrete
and praise God and tithe her last hisses
of middle age to brass collection plates.

Here the desert and the great plateaus
and the waste of water parks insist
they are no gorgons. How useless would
Perseus be here, winged mount or not, unable
to admit he loves a mask and head. And still
the city speaks of the worthy and the unworthy.

 

This Thing 
By Elizabeth Scanlon


You’re taking a lot
of pictures of yourself 
because you know 
it’s almost over, 
this Beauty thing, 
The thing they said 
you had going for you 
all along when really 
What good did it ever do 
But now 
that you see it
heading for the door 
It feels different 
feels like the friend you didn’t know
was at the crowded party,
too noisy & hot,
until you’re halfway out the door
the car already waiting
& so say hello & goodbye
all in one breath.

 

Steven Leyva was born in New Orleans, Louisiana and raised in Houston, Texas. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in 2 Bridges Review, Scalawag, Nashville Review, jubilat, Vinyl, and Prairie Schooner. He is a Cave Canem fellow and author of the chapbook Low Parish and author of The Understudy’s Handbook which won the Jean Feldman Poetry Prize from Washington Writers Publishing House. Steven holds a MFA from the University of Baltimore, where he is an assistant professor in the Klein Family School of Communications Design.

Elizabeth Scanlon is the Editor of The American Poetry Review. She is the author of Lonesome Gnosis (Horsethief Books, 2017), The Brain Is Not the United States/The Brain Is the Ocean (The Head & The Hand Press, 2016), and Odd Regard (Ixnay Press, 2013).

July 2020 Poetry Feature: Steven Leyva and Elizabeth Scanlon

Related Posts

Glass: Five Sonnets

MONIKA CASSEL
In ’87 I see guardsmen walk their AK-47s / on the platforms. The trains slow down but never stop. I think, / my mother was born in such a different Germany, but this is true for everyone / —so why can’t I stop looking?

cover of "Civilians"

On Civilians: Victoria Kelly Interviews Jehanne Dubrow

JEHANNE DUBROW
Now we live in North Texas, hours away from the nearest shore. And yet, the massive amounts of open space—all the prairie, marsh, and plains that we have here—started to feel like another kind of vast water, another great expanse of distance and isolation.

Lizard perched on a piece of wood.

Poems in Tutunakú and Spanish by Cruz Alejandra Lucas Juárez

CRUZ ALEJANDRA LUCAS JUÁREZ
Before learning to walk / and before I’d fallen upon the wet earth / already my heart hummed in three tones. / Even when my steps were still clumsy, / I already held three consciousnesses. // Long before my baptism, / already my three nahuals were running