Tag: Sullivan Scholarship

  • On Packing the Only Painting You Left by Daniel Crasnow

                A Golden Shovel

    I never asked myself about you. I did hope, though, that May-
    Be you would remember this empty room. Believe me, I never
    Wondered if you would return. I knew. (T)Here
    The sun rose at 8. Once upon a time, the
    Sun bloomed at 8 too. Now that plaster
    Painting isn’t worth the trouble. Dirty brushes and stir-
    Red colors aren’t worth the wash. As soon as
    You left you said goodbye and if
    I had just stood up to say “no”… You le(f)t me in
    A wardrobe of wilting aloe, plastic flower crowns and pain.
    I broke with the door hinges; laughed about it, that May-
    Be If I wasn’t so frightened or if I had never
    Given a fuck I wouldn’t be the only one to hear
    My heart-beat. May-be the
    Cold clouds of a Florida summer wouldn’t click like roaches
    In an empty moving box. I wouldn’t let this falling
    Slush remind me of all the paintings you did take with you. Like
    The crow who eats too many berries, and falls fat,
    Drunk and remembering— may-be then I’d learn to enjoy the rain.

    [1] Last words in The Ballad of Rudolph Reed by Gwendolyn Brooks

    Daniel Crasnow is a multi-genre writer and scholar at Stetson University where he holds a Sullivan Scholarship in creative writing. He has been awarded a scholarship to attend the DISQUIET International Literary Program (2018) and was a resident at the DISQUIET Azores Residency (2018).