Future Tense
Michael Metivier | Poetry
Given the signs and wonders, the bleeding
moons and whatnot, I inventory
the cupboards: a small cylinder
of nutmeg, two cans of tuna
packed in oil, an old brick
of brown sugar, birthday candles, elbow
macaroni, oyster sauce. No heads
of cattle, no vacuum-sealed heirloom
seed, no talisman apropos for the dimming
of days, just rain boots and drawers full of dead
batteries and rubber bands. These lovely kitchen
curtains I suppose could work
for tourniquets, but it took me all season
last year before I learned
you have to thin your seedlings or else
none will bear and the larder
will empty. What if my glasses break
when the rivers flow backwards. What then.
Michael Metivier is a poet, lexicographer, editor, and musician. His work has appeared in recent years in Poetry, Kenyon Review, Orion, and Prairie Schooner, among other publications. His poem “Glacial, Erratic” was published as half of a split chapbook with Erín Moure by the journal Columba in 2022. He is an editor at Merriam-Webster and lives with his family in Vermont.