Doug Ramspeck
Clairvoyant
The city fell asleep in my arms.
What is important here is the concept
of a pillow of streets.
It doesn’t matter what the dead believe,
their ontology of stillness.
It is enough that someone,
somewhere, cuts out his eyes and holds
them in his palms.
The work is never completed. We imagine
our lives as blood on the brain, as walking
through a warren of streets beneath
a naked eyeball of moon.
Skull moon, salt moon, prophecy moon.
It was Horace who described tossing aside
his shield and fleeing the Battle of Philippi,
which is one way to describe a life:
to imagine sitting tomorrow on a park bench
with a sack lunch perched in the lap.
The earth rotating more rapidly at the equator
than farther north or south,
and yet the sunlight strangely
incorporeal, as though it is dreaming us.
And the pigeons, too fat
for flight, pecking their way into tomorrow,
which is all we know to hope for or ask.
An international literary journal from 1984 to 2018, Verse now administers the Tomaž Šalamun Prize.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Monday, September 28, 2009
NEW! Poem by Nina Corwin
Nina Corwin
Interior With Artificial Leaves
What I meant to say, but the crop of false fruit kept intruding, is that
doorbells are not destiny. They have no teeth. Split infinities while
waiting for a ring.
When you come, you come without warning labels or guarantees
(black box from a bastion of caveat emptor). All I ask is the insider’s
peek.
The leaves have a theme song. It’s inspired by all those lullabies
with falling babies and broken branches. I’ll sing you a snatch before
the future explodes our foregone conclusion:
The heart is a minefield awaiting its moment. It bruises when served
open-faced. Parentheticals wipe their feet on every act of faith. Above
the sink, a cylinder of light winks like it’s in on the deal.
I got a call last month from a woman who uncorked a bottle of noxious
recollections. She asked if I could put them back.
I tried to tell her there’s always a stain that can’t be scrubbed, but my
tongue became a fountain spouting wishful thoughts. After that,
I planted my spleen beneath the bed to see if anything would grow.
Now, my duct work chokes with vines. Against the concrete tree,
woodpeckers beating their heads. Rakes are no match for the mess
that's spread between us.
I have a dangling proposition: part apostle in the garden, part storm
in your escape route. A dim bulb’s hope for harvesting sunrise from
shrapnel and sawdust –
Let’s say we blow up the second act and spatter gold paint on what’s
left. Send hope to the front lines to mop up the spills while we sleep.
Interior With Artificial Leaves
What I meant to say, but the crop of false fruit kept intruding, is that
doorbells are not destiny. They have no teeth. Split infinities while
waiting for a ring.
When you come, you come without warning labels or guarantees
(black box from a bastion of caveat emptor). All I ask is the insider’s
peek.
___________________
The leaves have a theme song. It’s inspired by all those lullabies
with falling babies and broken branches. I’ll sing you a snatch before
the future explodes our foregone conclusion:
The heart is a minefield awaiting its moment. It bruises when served
open-faced. Parentheticals wipe their feet on every act of faith. Above
the sink, a cylinder of light winks like it’s in on the deal.
___________________
I got a call last month from a woman who uncorked a bottle of noxious
recollections. She asked if I could put them back.
I tried to tell her there’s always a stain that can’t be scrubbed, but my
tongue became a fountain spouting wishful thoughts. After that,
I planted my spleen beneath the bed to see if anything would grow.
Now, my duct work chokes with vines. Against the concrete tree,
woodpeckers beating their heads. Rakes are no match for the mess
that's spread between us.
___________________
I have a dangling proposition: part apostle in the garden, part storm
in your escape route. A dim bulb’s hope for harvesting sunrise from
shrapnel and sawdust –
Let’s say we blow up the second act and spatter gold paint on what’s
left. Send hope to the front lines to mop up the spills while we sleep.