Jericho Brown is the author of three poetry collections: Please, winner of the American Book Award; The New Testament, awarded the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award; and The Tradition, for which he won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. In addition, his work has appeared in several volumes of The Best American Poetry. Brown is an associate professor and the director of the Creative Writing Program at Emory University.

The Tradition

by Jericho Brown

Aster. Nasturtium. Delphinium. We thought
Fingers in dirt meant it was our dirt, learning
Names in heat, in elements classical
Philosophers said could change us. Stargazer.
Foxglove. Summer seemed to bloom against the will
Of the sun, which news reports claimed flamed hotter
On this planet than when our dead fathers
Wiped sweat from their necks. Cosmos. Baby’s Breath.
Men like me and my brothers filmed what we
Planted for proof we existed before
Too late, sped the video to see blossoms
Brought in seconds, colors you expect in poems
Where the world ends, everything cut down.
John Crawford. Eric Garner. Mike Brown.

From The Tradition (Copper Canyon Press, 2019).


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