July/August 2006 Atlantic Monthly

by Alexander Nemser

Arabic

Article Tools

E-mail Article
Printer Format

Each mark a motion caught in ink, a dancer’s
Slow kick, a series of bowing waves, the path
Of spilt salt—sharp Js sloping up and Is
Like silhouettes of men or minarets
Seen miles ahead. Sometimes a number I
Could recognize: the year, a price for dates
Or Dexedrine; the street-side signs defiant
As captives; every book impenetrable.

Our hands did all the talking, gave commands
To cars in gestures: “Stop” (a palm outstretched),
And after, “Move along” (a rolling wave).
Thumbs up for soccer balls, down for Saddam.
In crowds I’d cross my arms and shake at all
The baffled curses hurled in my face like sand.

Alexander Nemser is completing an undergraduate degree in literature at Yale. He won first prize in The Atlantic’s 2004 Student Writing Contest in poetry.

Article Tools

E-mail Article
Printer Format

What do you think? Discuss this article in Post & Riposte.

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter.


Name

Address 1

Address 2

City

State Zip

Email

Atlantic Voices

Quote For The Day II Read more

11 May 2008 11:14 P.M.

Why You Shouldn't Donate Money to Harvard Read more

11 May 2008 5:17 P.M.

The Evangelical Manifesto Read more

09 May 2008 12:39 P.M.

Debt burden Read more

09 May 2008 6:59 P.M.

A Second McCain Aide Resigns Read more

11 May 2008 1:37 P.M.

Earthquake in China Read more

12 May 2008 03:15 A.M.

Muslim-Jewish Anti-Hog Coalition Read more

09 May 2008 3:15 P.M.

Pause Read more

02 May 2008 7:21 P.M.