I Give the Angel Chuck’s Watch, and He Recalls the First Night of Creation | Zachariah Claypole White

It was green then—the moon,
at the beginning of existence—

all rainforest and fresh paint. Angels
grew chickweed in sky-scarred craters.

We had no language, you understand,
only the possibility of it;

three strands of hibiscus arranged
left to right would mean grandmother;

it could also mean subway or wheelchair.
Read from right to left it could only signify

hummingbird. Another way of saying this:
absence is measured in petals.

There was no word for loss,
we learned that from you.

You ask if angels mourned. Of course,
but to convey mourning we

would uproot every tree in the forest,
move each to where its brother once stood.

The digging took only an hour,
but replanting, months.

(Time, though, did not yet exist,
so this was of little concern.)

The roots we kept healthy in mason jars
of honey and salt; each of us shedding a feather

into the open dirt. We admired the petulant
blue beneath, tossed acorns down to the new Earth.

At the lowest tides, angels leapt
the distance to tend fields of coral;

some harvests became the first phonemes,
others oil refineries and cargo ships,

crates of lithium batteries on a windless day. Tell me,
why did you leave this poem for so long?

When Chuck died, he held an ocean
in his throat and still you wonder

how many times a body can burn
before it is a glass horse

on another man’s shelf; how flames
might resemble anything other

than their own conflagration. Yes,
the hands of this watch are father

and son, chasing a cicada to its shell.
In the beginning there was no light

but we knew the dancing
would soon begin.

Zachariah Claypole White is a Philadelphia-based writer and educator, originally from North Carolina. He holds an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College, where he was a Jane Cooper Poetry Fellow. His work has appeared in, or is forthcoming from, Southeast Review, Prairie Schooner, and The Rumpus, amongst others. Zachariah has received support from the Kenyon Review Writers Workshop, Writer’s Digest, and Disquiet International. His awards include Flying South‘s poetry prize as well as two nominations for the Best of the Net and one for a Pushcart Prize. Zachariah teaches at the Community College of Philadelphia, Saint Joseph’s University, and Manor College.