• Home
  • Submit to Five South
  • The Weekly
  • Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
  • Submit to Five South

  • Submissions are open for flash, poetry, long fiction, and non-fiction. Read our submission guidelines.
  • Recently Published

    • The Evolution of Eve by Debra A. Daniel
      Who would’ve thought she’d ever dance again?
    • Our Theseus by Nathan Jefferson
      Last week he was a dishwasher who his coworkers called Ricky. Today he’s a day laborer named Eddie, clearing a pair of fallen trees off a new build’s lawn and fixing up a large garden. Rotting plank ripped out, new plank inserted.
    • Robbing the Pillars by Marie Goyette
      Ruth stood on the narrow iron bridge, gripping her father’s obsidian necklace, and wondered how many years it would take before the river wore them both down to nothing.
    • Roll for Love by Cidney Mayes
      She holds the dice up to me. “For good luck?”
    • The Call by Eben E. B. Bein
      I hungered into that quiet until— there—unbelievable!— a wolf spider scuttled onto a leaf.
  • Home
  • SUBMIT
  • About Five South
    • Newsletter
    • Masthead
    • Authors & Poets
  • DONATE
  • THE JOURNAL
    • The Weekly
    • Fiction
    • Non-Fiction
  • Join Us!
    • Volunteer Associate Editor, The Weekly
    • Volunteer Social Media Manager
    • Senior Non-Fiction Editor
    • Deputy Editor
    • Volunteer Readers

Biophilia by Nancy Lynée Woo

March 4, 2024
Reading Time: 1 Minutes

“May you live in interesting times.” – Chinese curse

 

I feel the war on the living world

in my sinuses. I watch a documentary

about the ancient Sumerians, who disappeared

after a 200-year drought. I hear a bit of news

in the background, something about

state reservoirs emptying. I’m counting

5, 6, 7 years of extreme drought.

Sumerians invented writing, the plow, and beer.

No one even knew they existed,

buried as they were underneath

three millennia of kingdoms, rising

and falling, rising and falling.

Despite it all, I throw my body

onto the ancient path of living.

My daily walk yields interesting sights:

a paddling of ducks lifting out of the water,

fallen palm leaves, small brown nuts

messing around on the sidewalk.

Whatever it is that animates the blue whales,

kelp, and coastal goldenbush,

even the silverfish, rats and cockroaches,

I’m in love with all of it, a rowdy,

raucous, wild love. I savor a chilly wind,

a bike ride to the beach, the large knobby root

sticking out of the giant tree where I sit

in the middle of a busy neighborhood,

listening to birds and fire trucks

and giant construction machines beeping,

thinking of the vast, barren ruins

of the bustling city of Sumer,

a once-prosperous society

that must have thought

they, too, would go on forever.

 

 

Free VersePoetry
Share

The Weekly

Nancy Lynée Woo
Nancy Lynée Woo is a poet and eco-organizer who harbors a wild love for the natural world. Nancy has received fellowships from California Creative Corps, Artists at Work, PEN America, Arts Council for Long Beach, and others. She holds an MFA in creative writing from Antioch University and is the author of I’d Rather Be Lightning (Gasher, 2023).

You might also like

The Call by Eben E. B. Bein
February 25, 2025
Caught by Chris Bullard
November 19, 2024
Second Winter Solstice During an Epidemic by Marianne Worthington
September 26, 2024
  • Poetry

    • The Call by Eben E. B. Bein
      February 25, 2025
    • Caught by Chris Bullard
      November 19, 2024
    • Second Winter Solstice During an Epidemic by Marianne...
      September 26, 2024
    • Beautiful Generative Machine by David Fowler
      September 17, 2024
    • Desire Speaks by Alexandra Burack
      September 11, 2024

  • Subscribe to our Newsletter
    Subscribe Now

    We won't spam you. Unsubscribe whenever.



  • Categories

    • Book Reviews
    • Fiction
    • Non-Fiction
    • Poetry
    • The Weekly
    • Uncategorized

  • DONATE
    VOLUNTEER
    ABOUT FIVE SOUTH
    MASTHEAD
    SUBMISSIONS



© Copyright 2020-2025 Five South :: Web Design by Kristen Simental