Strawberry
Bolder than
blood
Fleshier than a
whole collection
Of
summer spots
You wear your
heart inside out
With
sun-stained seeds
We wrap your
body greedily
With our
tongues and minds
Picking Blueberries
in the sweltering fields of
juicy july
they get so sexually agitated
all their nibbles become
bloated
with purple ripeness, eager
to be caressed, eager
to be sucked
Loneliness
All feelings are sharable, somehow
Except loneliness
Loneliness that drives you into the very depth
Knowingly
Like a caterpillar retreating, hiding itself
In its own cocoon
Where it keeps gnawing at the wall
Until it
flies out, like a butterfly
Subtracting: The Art of Self-Discovery
Take off all your garments
Peel off all your masks
Remove every tattoo on your
skin
Squeeze out both thoughts and
feelings
Stay naked inside out just
for a while
And you will return to the
original state
Of your selfhood, where you
can
Touch your inner being, where
you can
Observe your own soul, crying
there
Like a newborn baby
On the Ridge
At the waist of Cypress
Mountain
I yelled out my heart and
soul
And heard an echo, which did
not seem
To be my voice, so I climbed
higher
To the hilltop, where I saw
Some clouds floating like
sheep
Spread afar on the prairies
Where they were all staring
at me
As if I were a ghost, just
like them
Drifting around in the sky
So silent, so shapeless
Changming Yuan, 8-time Pushcart nominee and author of Chansons of a Chinaman (2009) and Landscaping (2013), grew up in a remote village, began to learn English at 19, and published several monographs before leaving China. With a PhD in English, Yuan currently tutors and co-edits Poetry Pacific with Allen Qing Yuan in Vancouver. Since mid-2005, Yuan’s poetry has appeared in 889 literary publications across 30 countries, which include Asia Literary Review, Best Canadian Poetry (2009;12;14), BestNewPoemsOnline and Threepenny Review.
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