Poetry
FALL 2024
They were starlings
by ACIE CLARK
On my way back from Alabama, the birds were on their way wherever.
Their bodies, so many strewn in long lines across the sky, looked like
the words I wrote as a child before I knew how to write words.
I thought my thoughts would simply announce themselves to the page
if I pressed my pencil to it. And still, as I write this poem, I’m waiting
to see what I’m going to tell myself. The birds landed in an empty
field, gleaning for whatever it was they’d find. The clouds, so whipped
by wind, turned the sky a milky blue, pouring down fast and thick as paint
as I drove under it. There is so much missing in the world I try to write about:
I don’t know what kind of birds or what had been planted or what to call
a cloud that does that. I’d like to say I don’t need to know to love them,
but why else did I spend a lifetime looking for my name? I promise myself
I will look into it later so for now I look at their bodies, try to remember.
For now, a correction: the field was not an empty field. It was so full of birds.
Acie Clark
Acie Clark is a trans writer from Florida and Georgia. They teach in the Film, Theatre, and Creative Writing Department at the University of Central Arkansas and as a nonfiction instructor in the summer program at Interlochen Center for the Arts. They are a 2024–2025 Fine Arts Work Center fellow in poetry. Their recent work can be found or is forthcoming in Shenandoah, Passages North, and The Massachusetts Review.