Kéchi Nne Nomu, a finalist in Narrative’s Fourteenth Annual Poetry Contest, is a Warri-born Nigerian writer and the author of the poetry chapbook Acts of Crucifixion. In addition, her work was included in Best American Essays, 2020. She holds an MFA in poetry from New York University and teaches at LIU Brooklyn.

Migrant

by Kéchi Nne Nomu

In saying grief, Sarojini says hope is the
      anguish of prayer. I dream what
      cannot be held, ask
it to cross a border, sit beside me. Old
      country, I am hopeful and
      troubadour. April awake,
I move through the dim house for days to find the
      world outside mythic. Those first days of
      routine
bloom. A day, long, intrauterine. Each raceme-
      shaped hour in the new country; disciple of
      inflorescence,
I pause to study petals stunned by their topaz. The descent of robins.
      How close the country comes to extinction with its
tongue invading me. How it makes
seasonal treatise. I replace
      my Celsius with its Fahrenheit, apologize to the old self,
saying I’m stung by the new country. Acclimating, I say peas, please,
      when I mean hunger for the oiliest ewà ágoyin. Stung. For the cumulus


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