Poems as Maps II

[on Pearl Hall’s island, Mississippi River]

This winter, we present a second special series on poems that can be read as maps. Read the introduction to this series.

Hall’s Island in the Mississippi River, Minneapolis. Photograph from the Fairchild Aerial Survey ca. 1950s. [Hennepin County Library]

that sweet little piece of as

is land

that poor little patch shaved

off the banks that is

a weeping in the wind

wound sweet little

with a fish smell a little

must’ve had a name

pagan and profane by God

it’ll be mine

little Pearl little Island

claimed for the good of all from

that mean little length of falls

that filthy little rich

little stretch of mills, foundries

a seeping in the water prick

and balls pardon

just a little

with a hot burning smell

Saint Anthony’s death by God

they’ll call it Hall’s

and build her up a little

and kill her some

run through and stomp on

she’ll be the meanest

little island by the time we’re

little still, talking island time

can’t be bought yet

but we’ll squat on her

in the meantime

takes a little time

we’ll get her right still

make that little piece

of heaven cry but

mercy just a little bit

for the Mrs.’ sake

she wants a pretty

Mrs. Hall a little

pretty little

little island

About the Series: Poems as Maps

Poems as Maps II, curated by G.E. Patterson, features work by Joshua Bennett, Jos Charles, Ernestine Hayes, Tanya Larkin, Aditi Machado, Chris Martin, Na Mee, Naomi Shihab Nye, Roger Reeves, Fred Schmalz, Prageeta Sharma, and Moheb Soliman.

Poems as Maps I, curated by Taiyon J. Coleman, includes work by Elizabeth Alexander, Bao Phi, Joanne Diaz, Nikky Finney, Sean Hill, Andrea Jenkins, Douglas Kearney, J. Drew Lanham, Claudia Rankine, Barbara Jane Reyes, Sun Yung Shin, Evie Shockley, and Ocean Vuong.

Cite
Moheb Soliman, “[on Pearl Hall’s island, Mississippi River],” Places Journal, January 2024. Accessed 03 Jun 2026. <>

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