GaitherNews Escape the Algorithm
Today --°
Updated
Categories
Books 1 source 0 views

“Boardinghouse With No Visible Address,” a Poem by Franz Wright

Article excerpt

So, I thought, as the door was unlocked and the landlord disappeared (no, he actually disappeared) and I got to examine the room unobserved. There it stood in its gray corner, the narrow bed, the sheets the color of old

So, I thought,

as the door was unlocked

and the landlord disappeared (no,

he actually disappeared)

and I got to examine

the room unobserved.

There it stood

in its gray corner,

the narrow bed, the sheets

the color of old aspirin.

Maybe all this had happened

somewhere inside me

already,

or was just about to.

Is there even a difference?

Familiar,

familiar but not

yet remembered . . .

The little narrow bed.

I had often wondered

where I would find it,

it find me, or

what it would look like.

Don’t you?

It was so awful

I couldn’t speak. Then

maybe you ought to lie down for a minute, I heard myself

thinking. I mean

if you are having that much trouble

functioning. And when

was the last time

with genuine sorrow

and longing to change

you got on your knees?

I could get some work done

here, I shrugged;

I had done it before.

I would work without cease.

Oh, I would stay awake

if only from horror

at the thought of waking

up here. Ma,

a voice spoke from the darkness

in the back seat

where a long thin man lay

his arms crossed

on his chest,

while they cruised slowly up and down

straining to make out the numbers

over unlighted doors,

the midnight doctor’s;

in his hurt mind

he was already merging

with a black Mississippi

of mercy, the sweat pouring off him

as though he’d been doused

with a bucket of ice water

as he lay sleeping. “I saw the light,”

they kept screaming. “Do

‘I Saw the Light’!”

Ma, there ain’t no light.

I don’t see no light.

__________________________________

Excerpted from Axe In Blossom by Franz Wright. Published July 2026 by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of The Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright © 2026 by Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright.