Scripture

You never understood the point, the Word
of God in every hotel nightstand. Thought

it heresy. Don’t they know what happens here?
It became your secret fascination, logging

the different bibles we found on roadtrips, culling
a story from the wear of their spines. This room

has seen a whole lot of sinners, when a bible
undressed itself in your lap. Sometimes, you’d read

the annotations from a previous guest
out loud, an abridged confession in the margin—

I pray my husband can forgive me, next
to Hebrews chapter thirteen, verse four. We were

unmarried, sinners every time you cracked
me open like the good book. My spine its own

story—the bending, the way it rids itself
of cover, how it arches the fullest part

of me into your hands. Our bed is godless
each time you press me into it, and still

you shut me up with your scripture every time;
Don’t call on him now. Your Lord can’t save you here.

 
Taylor Byas

Taylor Byas is a Black Chicago native currently living in Cincinnati, Ohio. She is now a second year PhD student and Yates scholar at the University of Cincinnati, and an Assistant Features Editor for The Rumpus. She was the 1st place winner of both the Poetry Super Highway and the Frontier Poetry Award for New Poets Contests. Her work appears or is forthcoming in New Ohio Review, Borderlands Texas Poetry Review, Glass, Iron Horse Literary Review, Hobart, Frontier Poetry, SWWIM, TriQuarterly, and others. Her chapbook, Bloodwarm, is forthcoming from Variant Lit this summer. She is represented by Rena Rossner of The Deborah Harris Agency.

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Final Poem Ending in a Beginning

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[Is Not Like Anybody Likes Grief, But Na Wetin Go Surely Come]