That Summer, My Father
spit the seeds of cantaloupes
off every porch; I watched them grow
sweet fruits. This is how I know a body
is capable of change: the swollen ovary,
the severing and joining of parts. My mouth
was wet with melon-flesh, my fingers
stained with berries, overripe. These, our ancestors
called service, knowing what it meant
to give. My mother called them
sarvas, which to me meant save us, or sometimes
starve us, depending on the lightness
of the day. Even then, no language
could detain me. In the evenings, I felt my shadow
melt into the shadows of the trees.
Zeke Shomler earned a Combined MA/MFA from the University of Alaska Fairbanks. He now teaches high school math. His poems have appeared in AGNI, Folio, Modern Language Studies, and elsewhere.
