Thursday, September 4, 2025

Jumoke Verissimo : Two poems

 

 

 

foreigners in another mouth

most people think silence is what fills the room
but the room is what brings                   stillness in
to speak its truth               and when silence opens up
to share what the room knows              the room’s
burden comes out in the air                   opens up
as if it were dawn    breaking on a frosted pane 

the strife & grace in departure:    the loss
           of skin touching     what is not kin
but vein & nerve & bones like how the tongue
meets the boundaries of its own palate (of smell that’s putrid)
of when we sit watching the collapse of another city      

like in the early light of november         when we watch the camera          pan
to a slow flight of ravens   the first respondents
heading for the carrion call          of flesh & blood & rubble
of sorrow that’s less news stories           when we know
it is someone’s beloved underneath the ruins
when we sit quietly in the room watching night news   the blues 

most people think silence is what fills the room
but the room is what invites                  stillness in
to speak its truth     and once silence opens up
to share what the room knows              the room’s
burden comes out in the air                   all open
as if it were dawn breaking on a frosted pane 

& then loss marks the soul with clarity             &
& then loss marks the soul with confusion       &
             sorrow carves the future
not much like joy              that once floodlit a shared path.

 

 

House on Death Row

I
i see. shadows as fish in a sea of sunlight,
maybe, because fish is the reason i am here today.
i, granddaughter to ancestral fishermen,
now fishing for dying stories, priced out of place
sit on the threshold of this crumbling door and absorb
the trace of realms surfacing as rows of tumbling houses.
i watch the rail line become a severing public art,
its jagged scar divides the area into an austere zone,
where weathered windows frame the sounds of daily toil
their backs turned to the sign announcing demise: FOR SALE 

II
GRANDPA IS BURIED IN THE BACKYARD BEHIND THIS HOUSE.
his grave doubles as a worktable in this space-starved tenement.
soon, he’ll be uprooted, dragged to a distant cemetery,
far from his home, so he won’t haunt future owners of this house.
But it isn’t odd to think he’d rather stay here,
HERE, WHERE HIS FISHING NET LIES, AND THE SHADOWS WON’T CEASE.
here, where his fishing net lay in their wounded mesh,
like a gull with broken wings unsure of its path to recovery,
my soul is the hesitant bird, aware the future is an already flawed flight.

 

 

 

 

 

Jumoke Verissimo is a poet and novelist living in Toronto. She is the author of two well-recognised collections: i am memory and The Birth of Illusion, both published in Nigeria and nominated for various awards, including the Nigeria Prize for Literature. Her most recent novel A Small Silence, received critical acclaim and was nominated for several awards, including the Edinburgh Festical First Book Award and the RSL Ondaatje Prize. It won the Aidoo-Synder Book Prize. Her writing explores traumatic re/constructions of everyday life and its intersection with gender, focusing on themes of love, loss and hope. She currently teaches in the Department of English Toronto Metropolitan University.