Poetry |

“Common Ground,” “Eating Greenland” & “Thirst”

Common Ground

 

 

To have a mailbox on the road

is to know good government,

delivering what’s mine and yours

 

rain or shine. To have a zip code,

a state, when countless stateless people

have no protection conferred by law

 

confers a protection I take for granted,

delivering daily its imperfect

form of the common good

 

to those who have an address,

whom chance didn’t bomb into statelessness.

 

 

*     *     *    *     *

 

 

Eating Greenland

 

 

This year, Nina chose, for her birthday’s theme,

climate change. Dressed as a sperm whale,

 

one guest explained the melting ice sheet;

a costumed glacier reported on

 

the average 11-degree rise in winter

temperatures. Nina’s sister brought

 

a birthday cake in the shape of Greenland,

the icy, snow-covered, central region

 

coated with whirled coconut shavings.

Immortal Jellyfish plunged a knife

 

into the cake, like a Cold War scientist

extracting a core of ancient ice for Camp

 

Century. Secret subsurface trenches hid

a nuclear reactor and dorms for soldiers

 

building missile sites. Should Russia strike.

In 1965, they abandoned the lab and its toxic

 

waste, beneath collapsing walls of melt. This year,

we ate Greenland, piece after sparkling piece.

 

 

*     *     *    *     *

 

 

Thirst

 

 

I thought I was finished with beauty,

having shed — given away, or sold — so much

and committed myself

 

to necessary objects only. Ready,

I thought, for the journey to simplicity,

to matters of the soul.

 

But when I saw a tiny reproduction

of Eleanor Ray’s Snowy Owl, 2020,

(6 ½ x 8 inches, oil on panel)

 

I had to have it — bone, eyes, turbulence,

appetite — little bird,

little hunger on the dune.

Contributor
Robin Becker

Robin Becker is the author of eight poetry collections, most recently The Black Bear Inside Me (Pittsburgh, 2018). Becker’s new collection, Midsummer Count: New and Selected Poems, is forthcoming in early 2026 via the University of New Mexico Press.

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