← Issue 9
Where a Name is Buried
by Jeddie Sophronius
for Lee Siok Lie
If your gaze were the fleeting
crimson of dusk,
I would be the fool
chasing that dying
light, hoping I could follow you
into an everlasting morning.
I never called
all the years I was away.
Through clouded nights
and flooded mind, I remained
breathing, beating without you.
I know, I’m only a child
running away
from a growing shadow. It’s no
use. I never called, not because
I didn’t care,
you raised me this way:
a gladiola to be watered, obedient
to the shifting of light and dark.
You told me not to call you
by your real name.
I grew up not knowing
the faint spark hidden
behind its meaning. When grandma died,
you didn’t cry, not even
when your siblings took turns
to pour cologne and scatter lilies
over her body, not even when they
shut the casket. Your mother
buried her secret name,
but perhaps you don’t have to.
Jeddie Sophronius was born in Jakarta, Indonesia. He is currently an MFA candidate at the University of Virginia and the poetry editor at Meridian. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in The Cincinnati Review, Prairie Schooner, The Iowa Review, and elsewhere.