Mara Adamitz Scrupe’s first chapbook, Sky Pilot, was nominated for the 2013 Library of Virginia Literary Awards. For her first book-length work, Beast, she was named the winner of the 2014 Stevens Poetry Manuscript Competition. A graduate of Macalester College, as well as the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College, where she earned an MFA, she has been awarded several national and international visual arts and poetry prizes. A finalist in Narrative’s Eighth Annual Poetry Contest, Scrupe is a professor of interdisciplinary arts at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.

& Bless: Poems

by Mara Adamitz Scrupe


Prester John’s Book of Stars

i. Istrouma
And in savage [it is] called Istrouma, which means red stick
[bâton rouge], as at this place there is a post painted red that the savages
have sunk there to mark the land line between the two [battling] nations.
—André-Joseph Pénicaut, ca. 1723


                         according        to the expedition’s indentured
woodworker/ carpenter half-honest                       storyteller the red
stick band       resisted encroachment/ assimilation
            synchronicity/                        red-painted war clubs
                         or maybe they were


medicine wands        we’ll never know       for certain
            the genesis people killed/   or captured & sold
in Saint-Domingue               so


            there’ll be no more   stepping off that       ledge
every day       no more self-policed
            torments & tortures no more nineteenth-century Old
World                          empires bring on       the revolutions roll
on       new world order & the most recent toll this


            week by my count (but I’ve lost count count
count)                         stands at                     ten


            & after the shafts       hit their targets
a president pled unity: a bullet need happen
             only    once   but for peace to work we need to
be reminded . . . . . . .

                         again & again &
again  a death ray    not-quite-dartle too bright &
            the fire flash               & echo
of a new-from-the-get-go clean slate                     or is it?
            as the nation’s sly grunt       & beery
            dregs


as military madness             hit-or-miss score-settling


            & retribution              our cumulative consciences
wept drained                          I’ve heard/ read white               on black
white on white & black on black     & no turning
back


            & Montrell in his blues tweets  please don’t
let please don’t
let
please              don’t


People on couch
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