Anders Carlson-Wee, a finalist in Narrative’s Eighth Annual Poetry Contest, is the author of Dynamite, winner of the 2015 Frost Place Chapbook Competition, and The Low Passions (Norton, 2019). He received Ninth Letter’s Poetry Award as well as New Delta Review’s Editors’ Choice Prize, and holds a BA from Fairhaven College and an MFA in poetry from Vanderbilt University. His work has appeared in The Best American Nonrequired Reading series. Carlson-Wee lives in Minneapolis, where he serves as a McKnight Foundation Creative Writing Fellow.

Fire and Other Poems

by Anders Carlson-Wee


Fire

There was a time when we didn’t know
how to make it. A long time. We ate animals
burned alive in forest fires. Developed a taste
for rare, for medium. Collected embers
and kept them going for generations, firewatchers
in caves danker than prehistory. We roasted
mastodons. Designed skewers, ovens, steampits.
Invented broiling. Slept with rocks
for the well-held heat. By the time we learned
how to urge smoke from sticks there was nothing
left to do we hadn’t already done. We cooked
the same. We slept near it the same. The difference
was control. Control kept us going. We smelted
iron-blooms in bloomeries. Hammered slag.
Fullered blood gutters to keep the longsword light.
We branded rams—horn, loin, rack, and flank:
Crazy K, Lazy 3, Half-Diamond Flying Double T.
We seared ears off sows to hear if the witches
would scream. They didn’t. But the children did
as they crawled away from their napalmed feet.

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