Skip to main content
Poets.org

mobileMenu

  • Poems
  • Poets
  • Poem-a-Day
  • National Poetry Month
  • Materials for Teachers
  • Literary Seminars
  • American Poets Magazine

Main navigation

  • Poets.org
  • Academy of American Poets
  • National Poetry Month
  • American Poets Magazine

User account menu

  • Log in
  • Membership
  • Donate
Donate
Poets.org

Poem-a-Day

The only daily poetry series publishing new work by today’s poets.

Page submenu block

  • find poems
  • find poets
  • poem-a-day
  • literary seminars
  • materials for teachers
  • poetry near you

Poem-a-day

These Hills

What they do not tell you about being a son
is that someday you’ll lift your mother out of necessity

& not know how to answer the deep ache in her

that refuses to leave from the botched surgery
on her four neuromas. They won’t mention the graft

of your skin on her skin you would give if it meant

her nerve cells might repair instead of defeat her
—their synapses flooded by the twice-daily pill

with a lyrical name that has strewn only wreckage

across her psyche for two decades so damaged
Achlys wouldn’t want them. Yes, a body can fade

& fragment in these hills like the green-veined

granite tumoring toward blossom, or a bloody
membrane between weeds & cedars. Hope was

a scalpel once. I could slide it across anything & be

healed completely was a dream she told me
repeats in her REM sleep. How do you

give someone who is burning permission

to vanish? Will she reincarnate as a gull
or the gray wave of foam a rogue hurricane

heaves up the local river with a serene quiet

worse than any crashing? How long have I been
still enough to witness it? This is grief. This is

seeing your mother suffer, & a wound made memory.

This is flame transforming: not a prayer but a fire
unquenchable covering our hands, our feet,

the neuromas clinging to our metatarsals

with a persistence so complete we feel no pain
stepping into the mansion in the sky

midnight is preparing. I collect every match

in its kitchen cabinets—scatter them
throughout each inch of this house

& its dry acreage in a dead galaxy

of black hole-filled pastures. I hear
a mockingbird calling her name as I strike

the first one & watch as it consumes the two

closest to it until there is a circuit of fire
connecting my lit skin to hers. Where a son

grieves a mother: a constellation. Where two bodies

meet failure: one crippling brilliance. I brighten 
where she does & darken where she does until

we cool to quartz, feldspar, mica, the bedrock

of this firmament no god could have sculpted
or made more imperfect, which is me holding her.

Copyright © 2026 by J. Scott Brownlee. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 2, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.

read the rest

J. Scott Brownlee

J. Scott Brownlee
Photo credit: Matt Valentine
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Tumblr
  • View print mode
  • Copy embed code
Add to anthology

Sign up for Poem-a-Day

* indicates required

About Poem-a-Day

Poem-a-Day is the original and only daily digital poetry series featuring over 250 new, previously unpublished poems by today’s talented poets each year. Dorianne Laux is the Guest Editor for April. Read or listen to a Q&A with Laux about his curatorial process, and learn more about the 2026 Guest Editors. Support Poem-a-Day.  

If you have any questions about Poem-a-Day, visit our Poem-a-Day FAQ.

Previous Poems

Title Author Date
frigates that take us lands away M. NourbeSe Philip 08/31/2023
[Aeons quest eye on] Julie Ezelle-Patton 08/30/2023
Lateral Violence Prageeta Sharma 08/29/2023
Valley Oak Julia Bloch 08/28/2023
Black Earth Marianne Moore 08/27/2023
Old Age Maxwell Bodenheim 08/26/2023
Short Talk on Pain Anne Carson 08/25/2023
Exposition Lauren Russell 08/24/2023
Three of Cups Gabrielle Civil 08/23/2023
Agnes, a sleep Hannah Ensor 08/22/2023

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page 94
  • Page 95
  • Page 96
  • Page 97
  • …
  • Next page Next ›
  • Last page Last »

Newsletter Sign Up

Support Us

  • Become a Member
  • Donate Now
  • Get Involved
  • Make a Bequest
  • Advertise with Us

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Tumblr
  • SoundCloud
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

Footer

  • poets.org

    • Find Poems
    • Find Poets
    • Poetry Near You
    • Jobs for Poets
    • Literary Seminars
    • Privacy Policy
    • Press Center
    • Advertise
  • academy of american poets

    • About Us
    • Programs
    • Prizes
    • First Book Award
    • James Laughlin Award
    • Ambroggio Prize
    • Chancellors
    • Staff
  • national poetry month

    • Poetry & the Creative Mind
    • Dear Poet Project
    • Poster
    • Sponsorship
  • american poets

    • Books Noted
    • Essays
    • Advertise
© Academy of American Poets, 75 Maiden Lane, Suite 901, New York, NY 10038
poets .org