Sonnet: Against the Gown
Leila Farjami | Poetry
I refused the wedding gown—a shroud with eyelets
for borrowed breath, sequins flickering like my mother’s
band, misplaced, dulled to moonlight, platinum
drab as rubble, deftly needled. She vowed to love
and cherish, then to drown—prone in wet sand.
Her dowry: a curler, a pack of pins, a poster
of Vivien Leigh from Gone with the Wind. No Tara
in Tehran. No soil to fist. Her mermaid’s tail
turned feet—raw, unshod, too soft for gravel. Heels
too high for a husband’s reach. Her nipples, offerings.
Her teeth, blackened by Ceylon tea. Once in a dream,
her lace dress of rhinestone rippled in sunlight—
salt domes gleaming. Then clouds roamed in. Then men.
Her wedding dress—seams ripped by their hands.
Leila Farjami is an Iranian-American poet and psychotherapist. Her debut collection, Daughter of Salt, an Editor’s Selection at Trio House Press, is forthcoming in July 2026. She is the winner of The Iowa Review Award in Poetry (2025), The Cincinnati Review’s Schiff Award (2024), and a PEN America Emerging Voices Fellowship (2025). Her work has been a finalist for the Prufer Poetry Prize, Perugia Press Prize, and others, and appears or is forthcoming in Ploughshares, The Iowa Review, Pleiades, AGNI, The Cincinnati Review, Mississippi Review, and anthologies from Sundress and Guernica Editions. She lives in Los Angeles.