In the Noise and Whip of the Whirlwind

Ama Codjoe

I know what it’s like to stand,

warming my face, before

a fire of poppies. I know

what it is to slink from a stranger’s

bed and rummage the floor

for a flowered dress.

And I know what it is to be a fern:

a part, and a whole, and a whole

part again. I tend my mother’s

garden and oil the roots

of my sisters’ shimmering hair.

Made of soil, grass stains,

and dew, I know what it is

to bloom. You’re right when you say

the shape of my life doesn’t depend solely

on me. Imagine trying to smooth a rock

into silk with your tongue. But

I’m no amateur: I’ve been an animal

all my life. I husk corn

of its glistening skirt. I don soft

garments only I can feel.

I change the vase’s water and dress

the table. And when all

the actualities are eaten, I wear

their bones as pearls.


describe one formal realization or change you made during the writing of this poem.

I wanted to write a poem to explore the ways the past has shaped me and the ways I can—and can’t—shape the future. I continue to wonder at the tension between agency and powerlessness in my life: the poem gave me the opportunity to describe the vitality, resourcefulness, and usefulness of that wondering. Partway through the revision process, I remembered a line from Gwendolyn Brooks’s poem “The Second Sermon on the Warpland.” Once I changed the title to “In the Noise and Whip of the Whirlwind” I began to revise toward Brooks: the poem found its final shape by being in conversation with her. The last lines of Brooks’s poem read: “Nevertheless, live. / Conduct your blooming in the noise and whip of the whirlwind.”

Ama Codjoe is the author of Bluest Nude, winner of the 2023 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize. She is the winner of a 2023 Whiting Award and a recipient of a 2024 Arts and Letters Award.
Originally published:
October 2, 2024

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