POETRY SPOTLIGHT:
MARLIN M. JENKINS
MARLIN M. JENKINS READS THREE POEMS
“Science hasn’t confirmed that watching TV will damage your eyes,”
“as kids we played super mario 64 and dropped baby penguins off of cliffs just because we could,” & “Portrait of Hansel and Gretel as Lost Black Family”
Science hasn’t confirmed that watching TV will damage your eyes
It was true: dangerous to sit so close
to the TV screen back when TVs emitted
radiation, but now, the advice—don’t sit too close
to the TV—is barely scientific. True, also,
that before LCD you could touch the screen
to feel its solid glass, curved, electric fuzz kissing
small fingertips against, for example, the plain colors
and limited polygons of mid-90s Nintendo games.
But today, press too hard and the layer
under screen appears to bleed, shifts like fresh paint
and if only we could, like Super Mario,
step into and beyond that landscape barrier—
find there a war we could remedy,
a penguin to race, a world of coins
and cannons that could launch us as far
as we’d like to go.
Of course we stayed close—
loved the hope in how a plumber could liberate
a kingdom; how our power could rise from
rescued stars or the change of a hat; how an eye
could be an enemy tracking our movement
vanquished by our closeness, our quick-footed
circles around the circular monster
until, dizzy, he collapses into himself, pays what he owes.
TALL GRASS
Boy-man whose breath is prayer
ready to breathe life
into video game cartridge.
Boy-man who don’t eat lunch
at school if the lunch ain’t free
this year, whose hunger
pastes eyes to closely-clutched
gray-scale screen all through church.
Boy-man proclaimed man
of the house—with second-hand clothes
from black garbage bag, used copy
of Pokémon Blue Version.
First chosen pokémon: bulbasaur—
pocket-monster with back-bulb
which grows like the dividing cells
mutating in granddad’s lungs. Sprouting
ivy. Boy-man briefly second-guesses choice:
perhaps instead of bulbasaur
should have picked squirtle: shell
which would grow and sprout
water-cannons, defeat each enemy
through baptism. He learns
to deal, make do—like the bankruptcy,
like the block, like the non-profit boxes
that provided Christmas morning.
Boy-man whose bulbasaur provides
protection; he knows
from what he was told by the pokémon
professor you don’t walk through
the tall grass without a pokémon,
like he knows from mother
you don’t walk outside alone at night.
The boy-man and his new
green friend—bulbasaur who was
a bulbasaur until he wasn’t: evolved
into ivysaur and the pre-plant
of sealed bulb became
flower, leaf, vine. And then, finally:
venusaur—titan with a tree
rooted to his back, the ability
to alter sunlight, channel
its energy. Boy-man wishes
himself this world of trouble
and wonder: cyber-world
where you battle until you can’t
but all healing takes is one nurse
and six seconds—where
the tall grass grows and is never
cut down. If only he could be
more like a grown bulbasaur: enough
grown green to photosynthesize—
never be in hunger, always be in bloom.
POKÉDEX ENTRY #7: SQUIRTLE
The shell is soft when it is born.
It soon becomes so resilient, prodding fingers will bounce off it.
boy you soft you gay you ain’t shit
you awkward ain’t real fake-ass sad boy
oreo-ass goodie goodie know-it-all nerd
doin too much let us tell you ‘bout yourself
we see your fear like how you sit by yourself
and tremble like how you think you too good
to have any friends like that time skating a boy
skated close tried to pass you and then by reflex
you blocked his swinging arm he looked at you
like your gay ass was trying to hold his hand
it is not that there is shell with me inside it
it is that i and shell are part and participle
compartmented coat to coax both poison
and antidote from how the phrases turn
i begun and i begin i be in this resilient
skin and all my clenched fingers ready
and all my sweat reflective and all my
shields sharpened and all my shell
a hardened rampage of rubber
some theories on origins
a pokémon can only say its name
or
it gets its name from the only thing
it can say
if the second case
then call me whine call me race
call me lonely monster nerdy trivia
from the time i was born i was
ready to know useless knowledge
to overthink an olive pit to obsess
and obsess repeat repeat
i was born and then soon
putting barrettes in my hair
climbing the tallest cabinets
to stuff cheerios in my diaper
i was born not with this language
with words for cereal or game or pixel
or pain
i grew and learned through symbols
gave my family
new names
left pallet town’s square
of seclusion and there is much
the professor didn’t tell me
about a world called kanto
about all the other regions
i could've flown to if i'd known
a visit home reveals to me
how i am a young version
of my shared-name father
we sit the same way
legs crossed stand the same way
with hands pressing the lower back
i noticed neither similarity
until it was said to me
when i was born
i did not know who my people were
and so i hated everyone who knew where
they belonged but hated more
everyone coated in a shiny mirror
everyone who wanted the best for me
everyone who chose me before
i could choose them
canon is unclear about who writes the pokédex
perhaps the professor notes from field work
before pallet town locked him in
a single room and each night
he stares into the mouth
of the river counting bubbles
and wishing each is a live creature
or is it just the adventuring child
jotting hyperbolic notes
while camped in the tall grass
maybe it's basically wikipedia with all
us trainers breeders battlers researchers
fashionistas filling in the legends
told to us from oral histories
ash asks the pokédex for nomenclature
it tells him what everything is
and he believes it
he calls his pikachu pikachu
and when pikachu responds:
pika pi pikachu the only lonely
vocabulary between his electric
cheeks red with innocence
he is saying human human human
i was born a human
if we start that basic
i was born and celebrate it
once a year i was born
and oh i remember i am thankful
and so i am sure to say i am thankful
my sisters call me not by my name
now it is brother
growing up it was just boy
a friend texts me calls me love
instead of my name
and i'm happy i was born
i was born in this skin
as this species and these
funny semi-fluid categories
and i learned i learned
these preoccupations this pain
this poking in my nerve endings
i was born and my name is not
what my mother
wanted to call me
in large crowds i think
i hear my name and i know not
what to say except
to shout it back
Marlin M. Jenkins was born and raised in Detroit and currently lives in Minnesota. The author of the poetry chapbook Capable Monsters (Bull City Press, 2020) and a graduate of University of Michigan's MFA program, his work has found homes with Indiana Review, The Rumpus, Waxwing, and Kenyon Review Online, among others. You can find him online at marlinmjenkins.com.