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POEM "EX(ILE)" BY TRINIDADIAN-BORN POET DESIREE C. BAILEY



DESIREE C. BAILEY, a poet and English teacher, was born in Trinidad & Tobago in the Caribbean Region. At nine years old, she migrated with her family to the United States where she grew up in Queens, New York. She has earned a BA from Georgetown University (Washington DC), an MFA in Fiction from Brown University (Rhode Island), and an MFA in Poetry from New York University.


Her debut poetry collection, What Noise Against the Cane (Yale University Press, 2021), has won the 2020 Yale Series of Younger Poets Prize. The collection was also a finalist for the National Book Award for Poetry and the Kate Tufts Discovery Award, and longlisted for the OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature and the International Dylan Thomas Prize.


Fellowships and residences include the Norman Mailer Center, Kimbilio Fiction, Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop, Poets House, The Conversation, Princeton in Africa, and the James Merrill House. She has also received the New York State Council on the Arts/New York Foundation for the Arts Award and the Poets & Writers Amy Award.


In Fall 2022, Bailey will take up the post of the Writer-in-Residence at Clemson University in South Carolina.


Visit the poet's official website at http://desireecbailey.com
Photo Credit: Wilton Schereka



EX(ILE) BY DESIREE C. BAILEY



We ask about our people and they tell us the plight of boats

yachts smashed in the marina, ferries crashed into harbors

masts snapped, propellers bent, vessels drowned in coves.


They broadcast reports of water rising in hotel rooms

sand slipping into sheets where our cousins could never sleep

salt stains as testimony, spit-prints of the hurricane's wrath.


Bodies are piling up in the morgues and instead

an elegy of boats

an inventory of industry, countdown

to when paradise can begin again.


So it seems when we're no longer property

we become less than property

a nail sick with rust, jangling in high winds.


This would be a different story were it not

for ex(ile), whose sting swells when banished

in one's own yard, barred

from the fruits of your mother's land.


Inside ex(ile): tempests and fault lines

are developers' wet dreams.

A mainland will sink its territory in debt

starve its subjects in the wake of storms

clearing ground for palaces on the shore.






EX(ILE) continued



Inside ex(ile): the body is only

as good as its technology

how it buckles in a field.


Inside ex(ile) is the ile

pushed across the Atlantic through Oya's lips.

Place or shelter, sacred home.


We ask about our people and fill the silence with prayer

utterances rerouting to our climate's first spirits:

Guabancex blowing furious winds, Huraca'n spiraling at the center.

Guatauba drenched in thunder and lightning.

Coatrisque of the deadly floods.


Spare our kin, we plead. Save your wrath for the profiteers.

Cast them from our archipelago, our ile ife of the seas

until home is a place we never have to leave.






Source: What Noise Against the Cane by Desiree C. Bailey, Yale University Press, New Haven/USA and London/UK, 2021.