Bereavement Behind his house, my father’s dogs 
 sleep in kennels, beautiful, 
 he built just for them.  
 They do not bark. 
 Do they know he is dead? 
 They wag their tails  
 & head. They beg 
 & are fed. 
 Their grief is colossal  
 & forgetful. 
 Each day they wake 
 seeking his voice,  
 their names. 
 By dusk they seem 
 to unremember everything—  
 to them even hunger 
 is a game. For that, I envy. 
 For that, I cannot bear to watch them  
 pacing their cage. I try to remember 
 they love best confined space 
 to feel safe. Each day  
 a saint comes by to feed the pair 
 & I draw closer 
 the shades.  
 I’ve begun to think of them 
 as my father’s other sons, 
 as kin. Brothers-in-paw.  
 My eyes each day thaw. 
 One day the water cuts off. 
 Then back on.  
 They are outside dogs— 
 which is to say, healthy 
 & victorious, purposeful  
 & one giant muscle 
 like the heart. Dad taught 
 them not to bark, to point  
 out their prey. To stay. 
 Were they there that day? 
 They call me  
 like witnesses & will not say. 
 I ask for their care 
 & their carelessness—  
 wish of them forgiveness. 
 I must give them away. 
 I must find for them homes,  
 sleep restless in his. 
 All night I expect they pace 
 as I do, each dog like an eye  
 roaming with the dead 
 beneath an unlocked lid.     
Memorial Day Thunder knocks 
 loud on all the doors.  
 Lightning lets you 
 inside every house, 
 white flooding  
 the spare, spotless rooms. 
 Flags at half mast.  
 And like choirboys, 
 clockwork, the dogs 
 ladder their voices  
 to the dark, echoing off 
 each half-hid star.     
Greening It never ends, the bruise 
 of being—messy,
 untimely, the breath  
 of newborns uneven, half 
 pant, as they find
 their rhythm, inexact  
 as vengeance. Son, 
 while you sleep
 we watch you like a kettle  
 learning to whistle. 
 Awake, older,
 you fumble now  
 in the most graceful 
 way—grateful
 to have seen you, on your own  
 steam, simply eating, slow, 
 chewing—this bloom
 of being. Almost beautiful  
 how you flounder, mouth full, bite 
 the edges of this world
 that doesn’t want  
 a thing but to keep turning 
 with, or without you—
 with. With. Child, hold fast  
 I say, to this greening thing 
 as it erodes
 and spins.								
									 Copyright © 2014 by Kevin Young. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.