Poem - “Tuesday Soup”
In Monday’s soup, you put in
What you have –
–
Leftovers from Sunday,
Chicken, red rice, cilantro.
–
On Tuesday, you put in
What you have
–
Even less of now,
The one leftover piece of dark chicken
–
Nobody wanted, the suspect
Rice with the black-rim
–
Stain from something, something
That got dropped, or from a spoon
–
Dipped into something else first
Then used in the rice, a stain
–
Growing darker by the hour,
Darker and bigger.
–
On Tuesday, dinner skates
At the edge of the ice.
–
Wednesday is something safe,
Starting over with fresh beans,
–
A trip to the grocery store, jícama,
Bananas and chilies, all fresh, all new.
–
Thursday survives by luck,
Living on the enthusiasms of Wednesday,
–
The small piece of pork that was on sale,
The other extras, the olives,
–
The big sack of soft avocados
Too ripe to wait, which is why they were so cheap.
–
Friday begins the weekend,
Three days that take care of themselves in the world.
–
But Tuesday, Tuesday is what people remember,
Like it or not, Tuesday, so easy to forget
–
Otherwise. Tuesday, always circumstance and luck,
A day in which gamblers sit at the dinner table,
–
Unfortunate and miserable. But in the quiet attempt
Whoever cooks dinner makes,
–
Tuesday is the day
All great discoveries are made.
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“Tuesday Soup” from The Dangerous Shirt. Copyright © 2009 by Alberto Ríos. Reprinted by permission of Copper Canyon Press. See coppercanyonpress.org.