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POETRY

How to Love the Natural Sciences

Jennifer Loyd

I’m eating fruit over the sink again,

so the summer houses must be empty.


Yesterday, the last veeries, our birds.

“Always make a note of where,” you said.


The fallow road between our houses.

One sounded out: veer-veer-veer,


“Or was it jeer?” I said.

Birds, chaff, you—south.


State line like a hemisphere.

You are foraging, forgetting


the wings which could return you.

Could you even handle me year-round?


“Listen. Coppery echo, tin soliloquy.”

Some somatic sweetness brushes past me


on its way down the hill.

I remember you handing me


back to myself. No

freckled chests, no cinnamon wings,


only the last of the wood-wasps.

“Trace your hand on a piece of paper,


and I’ll buy you a ruby ring,” someone said once.

My walk back—littered with fallen plums.

Based in West Texas, Jennifer Loyd is a poet, translator, and a former editor for Copper Nickel, West Branch, and Sycamore Review. For her poetry exploring the archives of Rachel Carson, she has received a Stadler Fellowship, as well as research grants from Purdue University, where she earned an MFA. Her poems and prose, which explore the intersection between private voice and public narratives, appear in Best New Poets, The Southern Review, The Rumpus, Swamp Pink, Shenandoah, Prairie Schooner, Poet Lore, and elsewhere.

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