Leningrad
I loved you; and the hopelessness I knew,
The jealousy, the shyness, though in vain
Made up a love so tender and so true.
A.S. Pushkin
I memorized your words before I touched your soil—
Leningrad, the name you held the day I arrived
an outpost with guards and uzzis staring us down
and filterless papirosy
Where Dostoevsky sat and composed his questions
that grabbed my heart and twisted my mind
and pulled me—here
to find Raskolnikov’s attic
To kneel in Haymarket Square, like Sonya
and beg for mercy
for understanding, a hand reaching out
a hand pouring vodka, salty pickles, bitter black bread
so heavy it could break a toe—comfort food
for the underground man
Drinking sweet day-old tea all night on the train, red arrow
to see Red Square, to see dead Lenin, to see St. Basil’s
and the beauty that blinded its master
You taught me to love, you taught me to fear
to taught me to hate, you taught me to live
in the absurd world
of madmen’s minds
You flow in my veins like the
kvass I imbibed, like the Shostakovich that haunted
like the Swan Lake that terrified
or the Pushkin, dear Pushkin
I loved you, I hated you
and probably still do.