Naomi Tarle
THREE POEMS
not light of foot
or of tongue
*
when you visit the river—
treadle up the stitch
*
mr. fly, you are all push
An international literary journal from 1984 to 2018, Verse now administers the Tomaž Šalamun Prize.
Monday, November 25, 2013
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
NEW! Poem by Travis Cebula
Travis Cebula
A POEM ABOUT AN INSURANCE MEETING
respect
fully
no thank
you you're
welcome
to your
rueful
roomful
A POEM ABOUT AN INSURANCE MEETING
respect
fully
no thank
you you're
welcome
to your
rueful
roomful
Monday, July 22, 2013
NEW! Two poems by Jason Labbe
Jason Labbe
Two poems
MAP OF THE BLUE BLUE BLUE
I have a blue sliver of hot aluminum.
I have a hot blue sliver in my middle finger.
Just below my knuckle I have a flash
of blue glinting as though the weather
were fairer than the fluorescent light
of my basement, warmer than the terrible
voice mail I have informing me
of the latest sighting. You’re back in town
and your drunken face is all sunken in.
I have a sister who warns me of you.
I love my sister who hates the smell
of your lies and thieving as much as I do.
I have taken a year to take inventory.
What I have left I have bolted to the floor,
except this sliver of blue aluminum infecting
my middle finger. I have a workshop
in my basement and a father who taught me
how to design, fabricate, and assemble
a precision machine. I cut and mill
and turn and drill. Soon I will complete
the Blue Machine to protect us from you.
My middle finger finesses my micrometer,
it adjusts the tooling when the dimensions
from the blue print slip out of tolerance.
My middle finger is primary as the sliver
and grows bluer because I strangle it
with a silvery blue ribbon, all nice and curled
at its ends. Here, have it and keep it
forever. The rest, everything else you see,
is for me. But my blue, it gleams for you.
MAP TEARING INSIDE A TORNADO
My sleepless ice dwindles
into the warming arctic, my every
bit of plastic particulate swirls
in the North Pacific, my gulf’s green
suffocates on the dark-slicked banks—
A power line whips the sidewalk
but the images stay up on my screen
shaking so much it’s going to shatter.
The devices stop communicating.
A muscle car calendar scatters from a patio
and the pages catch in the maple
with the wail of the sirens.
The thinnest diseased limb snags me,
I won’t decompose.
The flash flood through the side yard
is white noise at my knees,
I will go on to poison even stardust.
I am one hundred ninety pounds
of preservatives, antibiotics, and caffeine
rain-soaked and panicking for shelter.
I was too late to board the doors, I forget
the warning and press my chest
against both sides of the picture window.
My last locatable belief was in the shift
from weird grey to the lightness
of a pickup truck, now all I know is
I would bury this berserk wind
and collect the neon Chemlawn clippings
blowing through the blown out
cellar window, my next spring
gone well before the first snow—
My affinity for unseasonable weather
cools. I collect and count the wet blades
and strip away the pesticides
with my teeth. O my polar ice cap
creeping toward a lower river, O
my crowning ozone a hundred tons
of satellite wreckage crashes through,
O my beloved house whose roof
ripped clean off takes out the pages
but not the siren in the maple.
My roof takes off the top of the maple.
Two poems
MAP OF THE BLUE BLUE BLUE
I have a blue sliver of hot aluminum.
I have a hot blue sliver in my middle finger.
Just below my knuckle I have a flash
of blue glinting as though the weather
were fairer than the fluorescent light
of my basement, warmer than the terrible
voice mail I have informing me
of the latest sighting. You’re back in town
and your drunken face is all sunken in.
I have a sister who warns me of you.
I love my sister who hates the smell
of your lies and thieving as much as I do.
I have taken a year to take inventory.
What I have left I have bolted to the floor,
except this sliver of blue aluminum infecting
my middle finger. I have a workshop
in my basement and a father who taught me
how to design, fabricate, and assemble
a precision machine. I cut and mill
and turn and drill. Soon I will complete
the Blue Machine to protect us from you.
My middle finger finesses my micrometer,
it adjusts the tooling when the dimensions
from the blue print slip out of tolerance.
My middle finger is primary as the sliver
and grows bluer because I strangle it
with a silvery blue ribbon, all nice and curled
at its ends. Here, have it and keep it
forever. The rest, everything else you see,
is for me. But my blue, it gleams for you.
MAP TEARING INSIDE A TORNADO
into the warming arctic, my every
bit of plastic particulate swirls
in the North Pacific, my gulf’s green
suffocates on the dark-slicked banks—
A power line whips the sidewalk
but the images stay up on my screen
shaking so much it’s going to shatter.
The devices stop communicating.
A muscle car calendar scatters from a patio
and the pages catch in the maple
with the wail of the sirens.
The thinnest diseased limb snags me,
I won’t decompose.
The flash flood through the side yard
is white noise at my knees,
I will go on to poison even stardust.
I am one hundred ninety pounds
of preservatives, antibiotics, and caffeine
rain-soaked and panicking for shelter.
I was too late to board the doors, I forget
the warning and press my chest
against both sides of the picture window.
My last locatable belief was in the shift
from weird grey to the lightness
of a pickup truck, now all I know is
I would bury this berserk wind
and collect the neon Chemlawn clippings
blowing through the blown out
cellar window, my next spring
gone well before the first snow—
My affinity for unseasonable weather
cools. I collect and count the wet blades
and strip away the pesticides
with my teeth. O my polar ice cap
creeping toward a lower river, O
my crowning ozone a hundred tons
of satellite wreckage crashes through,
O my beloved house whose roof
ripped clean off takes out the pages
but not the siren in the maple.
My roof takes off the top of the maple.
Monday, July 15, 2013
NEW! Poem by Jillian Mukavetz
Jillian Mukavetz
say it again, on your knees
to fall in love in dreams is rare
the architecture
a handkerchief coughs into a man
.
closer
tears in your eyes
say it again, on your knees
to fall in love in dreams is rare
.
moving without moving
say it again, on your knees
to fall in love in dreams is rare
the architecture
a handkerchief coughs into a man
.
closer
tears in your eyes
say it again, on your knees
to fall in love in dreams is rare
.
moving without moving
Tuesday, July 09, 2013
NEW! Two poems by David Blair
David Blair
PEACEFULNESS
In peacefulness, true. They were getting along,
just like the two Koreas. Denying each other
foodstuffs once in a while, every once in a while
moving some stuff around, shooting some stuff.
AT PARK STREET STATION
A season of beautiful raincoats
and squirrel phones,
their haircuts, skirts, and suits
always better looking,
to relationship negotiations
and other quail feathers,
dinner plates,
work stuff, couples
carry on their heavy work
the way the coyotes hold anvils,
the subway on one level,
slim streetcars up here,
walls, ceilings, tunnels
sprayed with fire repellant,
against fire, but not mud,
catacombs, a Venetian future.
Isn't it romantic,
and won't it be?
Yes, and yes.
PEACEFULNESS
In peacefulness, true. They were getting along,
just like the two Koreas. Denying each other
foodstuffs once in a while, every once in a while
moving some stuff around, shooting some stuff.
AT PARK STREET STATION
A season of beautiful raincoats
and squirrel phones,
their haircuts, skirts, and suits
always better looking,
to relationship negotiations
and other quail feathers,
dinner plates,
work stuff, couples
carry on their heavy work
the way the coyotes hold anvils,
the subway on one level,
slim streetcars up here,
walls, ceilings, tunnels
sprayed with fire repellant,
against fire, but not mud,
catacombs, a Venetian future.
Isn't it romantic,
and won't it be?
Yes, and yes.
Tuesday, April 02, 2013
new issue of Verse
The new issue of Verse (Vol 29 #s 2 & 3) is out, with portfolios of poetry and fiction by
Joanna Howard
Jasmine Dreame Wagner
Sarah Goldstein
Shannon Tharp
Lance Phillips
Adam Strauss
Matt Reeck
The 225-page issue is available for $8 (price includes postage). Send a check to Verse, English Department, University of Richmond, Richmond, VA 23173.
Joanna Howard
Jasmine Dreame Wagner
Sarah Goldstein
Shannon Tharp
Lance Phillips
Adam Strauss
Matt Reeck
The 225-page issue is available for $8 (price includes postage). Send a check to Verse, English Department, University of Richmond, Richmond, VA 23173.
Monday, March 11, 2013
NEW! 3 poems by Gina Barnard
Gina Barnard
Three poems
ALBA
Nudge my nose just under
your ear, sometimes we slather
too much praise, like mayonnaise.
After tea, the bed is still warm
with you, mayonnaise.
ELEGY
You eat a sweet potato so fast your chest fills with cement and you hiccup to catch your breath.
FIRE ANT
dug its head into the back of my thigh
sliding down
stairs in the bedroom, the old house.
*
A pinch--
a yearning.
Three poems
ALBA
Nudge my nose just under
your ear, sometimes we slather
too much praise, like mayonnaise.
After tea, the bed is still warm
with you, mayonnaise.
ELEGY
You eat a sweet potato so fast your chest fills with cement and you hiccup to catch your breath.
FIRE ANT
dug its head into the back of my thigh
sliding down
stairs in the bedroom, the old house.
*
A pinch--
a yearning.
Monday, March 04, 2013
NEW! Poem by Jess Novak
Jess Novak
IN PICTURES, EVEN THE WALLPAPER GLOWS
IN PICTURES, EVEN THE WALLPAPER GLOWS
I’ve been talking to this girl online—Jack calls her
Internet Crush Katie, but she’ll be Real Human Being Katie
soon enough, & that’ll fuck
everything right up.
In the smartphone pictures she sends me,
her breasts burn white, overexposed and chewable;
like a model in a Bacardi ad, she throws
her head back, perpetually laughing,
surrounded by girls, more girls, so many girls,
girls who are all
just my imaginary type, girls who flaunt
cool band t-shirts & expensive haircuts,
girls who might text me cute things:
let’s watch ice cubes melt
or let’s poke bugs with sticks together.
Girls who wouldn’t ask why the porn I watch
is so weird or call my mom when they haven’t heard
from me. I bet they wouldn’t still be friends with all my old friends
so I don’t get to see them. They would never remember
to tuck in the sheets.
Monday, December 31, 2012
NEW! Poem by Ethan Paquin
Ethan Paquin
NEIGE [THREE SCENES]
1.
aimless
animal-coloured tumbler your library’s aphotically indeterminate
you
morning the ground to groggier-than-usual’s millions of earmarks;
there
are no students eternal only stop signs to bark commands rufescent,
only
stalléd cirri shelves and shelves of them bustling ether of nowhere
only
my eyes no millions of other watchers imprecise tumbler heft spills
from
the seat of god onto our laps a necklace to be untangled with bones
and a
half-erased script and stumps for motivations, ut pictura cirrus this’s
all
that comes to mind Latin for curl of hair thus the portrait of a girl who’s
blanched
perhaps she’s suffered, perhaps she’s been spooked, likely in love.
2.
in
love and staring out a window ut drizzle poesis, so goeth poetry as drizzle,
lovers’
crazy ideas of where their object went the evening before, before snow
tumbled
before her eyes saw the result of the katabatic front. Ut drizzle poesis,
long
gray nuance between stanzas the meander from cup of tea to the next one,
snow’s
meanwhile abstraction an easy metaphor for the week. Young woman
in
love as you are please, do not comb your hair—I see you motion for a brush
through
the window I watch and clasp myself, do not to the narrative of dawn
surrender,
stay wild and pained and look that way. This is not mere entertainment.
Snow
tumbles aimless, accretes aphotic my gaze though is fixed upon you.
3.
such
sentimental passages about love, weather and fixéd male gazes hunter
as he
is, supposedly, of erotic experience wherever to be found. I’m stupid
like
dander, or clover. I transcend no fence reach no apple bough. Limitless
are
other poetries of the engines, of the random, of the idiomatic, of the
popunders
and
overt flâneurist grit-amenities. I wear a poem like this like, say,
a dead
braid or a last match, bit of its tip scratched off, the thing useless for
cigarette
to say nothing of survival or bonfire at the beach where the talk’s
of sex
and nothing but sex. A deadened band of cirrus is known to haunt us
at our
windows the girl and I like snapped taper candles, outside the snows.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
RIP Dennis O'Driscoll
Dennis O’Driscoll
FRAMES
for Patrick Taylor
I.
Bring out your dead grass
wedged to the blades
of a dormant lawnmower.
Time for cans of paint,
white spirits, rags.
in the mauve light
of delphiniums.with honeyed tongues.
like blossoms.
A fern stretching
its wing.
to full size, plump
as a colony of seals,
make the viscous journey
to a meal of hosta leaves.
you’d know it was
their first time:
so bright, so upright,
so unaware.
triggered off by hawthorn,
by the green of far-off hills
seen from your top-floor office
when sun pays out its light.
always be spring,
a held note.
look forward
to long days
haze lifting
like a screen,
off the Gulf Stream
one by one.
(from Verse Volume 21 #s 1-3)
Monday, December 24, 2012
NEW! Poem by Aaron Apps
Aaron Apps
FLESHLIKE ACTIVITIES
Suppose the arbitrary violence that is bound into action shapes us. Sexes us. Suppose each of us is oriented like an anchored vessel on a caustic sea. Suppose each vessel is anchored by a thousand strings of yarn that have no weight as they disintegrate in the acid body of the ocean. Fibrous expanse. Suppose each line of fiber within each strand of yarn is the type of vessel that pumps blood. Suppose further each small fiber is the type of vessel that holds the dark things themselves that move forward to what the dark hollow the mouth calls “now.” Now spoken out of the empty echoing tube that runs down into a series of fleshlike activities. Flesh bound by arbitrary violence. The violence of a thick thread. If the supposition is made that the acts of moving utterance are followed by a fire of wires is the binding principle that holds each contingent instance together believable? Livable? For each principle that is a thing amid a multiplicity of things there is a sense behind it. A sense of the plenum around which activity gathers. Split end, thread bare, eye wire. See: we might have a sense of what it means to echo the word “nature” after the word “now.” We might cut our own eye off. We might cease to be we. We might bend like the dark line of the sexed I. I suppose that these threads are sexed bodies perceiving down a tangle within a current within a tangle within a flood. I suppose that the violence of the flood is unavoidable as vomit after swallowing a gallon of opaque eye milk.
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
NEW! Poem by Anis Shivani
Anis Shivani
TIMEX
I capsize newspapers in water. I shake myself free of watchwords. I hang balloons on wounded sticks, the balcony gold-latticed on the truant morning, the moon a waxy after-effect smudged like conversation. Music, lavish and omnipresent, squeezes between drachmas and bangles. My deck of cards falls like a waterfall. My mother calls me inside in a voice splintered like a thousand bees on the same mission. Sunlight washes over my soft thighs and knees like a baby’s croons. The fly’s intermittent buzz reminds me of forgotten lessons. Time is a century of turquoise pools facilitating suicide. My first watch is a gift of anxiety. Now seconds count. How long can I hold my breath? Palm trees whip in the wind like runaway children. My mother calls again, from the other side of the moat, unable to tickle my ears. A line of ants, curving like serious S’s, forecasts future earthquake cracks. The dark stairways of my hundred-year-old building steal me like a pasha’s only son, hunting in the garden alone at night, kissed by talented witches. The weight of the building is like ten earthquakes occurring simultaneously in a moment. Yellow and red almirahs unfurl their metal skin for a stolen touch or two, laughing at their open secrets. Each morning is like every other until I split it open, the street is a parade ground for costumed vendors with voices like melons, the smell of boiled potatoes makes me believe no one can ever be sick or poor. I steal time and the world lets me. My mother calls a last time, fanning herself with the lazy newspaper. I ought to be a child detective like in my favorite books, but the tar streets and black palms and drunk pools are too friendly, they all want to pat me, they won’t fight back.
TIMEX
I capsize newspapers in water. I shake myself free of watchwords. I hang balloons on wounded sticks, the balcony gold-latticed on the truant morning, the moon a waxy after-effect smudged like conversation. Music, lavish and omnipresent, squeezes between drachmas and bangles. My deck of cards falls like a waterfall. My mother calls me inside in a voice splintered like a thousand bees on the same mission. Sunlight washes over my soft thighs and knees like a baby’s croons. The fly’s intermittent buzz reminds me of forgotten lessons. Time is a century of turquoise pools facilitating suicide. My first watch is a gift of anxiety. Now seconds count. How long can I hold my breath? Palm trees whip in the wind like runaway children. My mother calls again, from the other side of the moat, unable to tickle my ears. A line of ants, curving like serious S’s, forecasts future earthquake cracks. The dark stairways of my hundred-year-old building steal me like a pasha’s only son, hunting in the garden alone at night, kissed by talented witches. The weight of the building is like ten earthquakes occurring simultaneously in a moment. Yellow and red almirahs unfurl their metal skin for a stolen touch or two, laughing at their open secrets. Each morning is like every other until I split it open, the street is a parade ground for costumed vendors with voices like melons, the smell of boiled potatoes makes me believe no one can ever be sick or poor. I steal time and the world lets me. My mother calls a last time, fanning herself with the lazy newspaper. I ought to be a child detective like in my favorite books, but the tar streets and black palms and drunk pools are too friendly, they all want to pat me, they won’t fight back.
Monday, December 17, 2012
NEW! Poem by rob mclennan
rob mclennan
A SINGLE STREAK, PURE WHITE OF SKY
1.
If the day quickened, ear
on the chest,
arrhythmic. Stop,
and go slow,
slow.
2.
Make of threads, to drawn,
an island
dead, unaided. We,
a person.
3.
Graph, should
something happen,
to forget
would be
impassable.
A SINGLE STREAK, PURE WHITE OF SKY
on the chest,
and go slow,
an island
a person.
something happen,
impassable.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
NEW! Review of Elizabeth Robinson
Counterpart by Elizabeth Robinson. Ahsahta Press, $17.95.
Reviewed by Aromi Lee
Elizabeth Robinson’s twelfth collection of poetry, Counterpart, consists of thirty-five poems, grouped and anchored by epigraphs taken mostly from her contemporaries. Her author’s statement explains that the poems focus on “the uncanny presence that one recognizes and yet does not.” Robinson’s uncluttered, hypnotic lines are both subtle and bold in her examination of the fear that the self and language are mutable, unpredictable, even sinister and hostile. Her poems center on the possibility of a dialogue with the self about the self, and one can become lost in the web of self-reflexivity that ensues. The confrontations of self and self may yield nothing, and the fear of finding nothing haunts these poems. Nevertheless, the willingness to peel back the layers of ‘self’ and face the shadows of these self-encounters drives the momentum of Counterpart.
The book’s first poem, “Turn,” introduces a cyclical nature that recurs throughout: the “one sharp kernel” becomes a “bitter seedling,” and out of that seed “comes / the green aperture.” The “green aperture” is described in similar terms as the seedling: it is “bitter, tender, self- / pursuing.” The seed and the green aperture are outwardly different, yet both are “bitter,” pointing to a cycle at work: the seed becomes the green aperture, and the cycle starts over. It is revealing that this first poem is prefaced by a quote from Charles Baudelaire (“You find it pleasing to plunge into the bosom of your image”), for it is an invitation to the reader to join the speaker on this inward journey, to listen in on the speaker’s “interior conversations.” In another quote, this inward journey is imbued with a sense of urgency; Barbara Guest calls “the act of discovering where the self starts, hears itself, and repeats the instructions” “a necessity.” This urgency, coupled with the central question of “Who am I?” posed by André Breton in the next epigraph, propels readers into the next set of poems, the first of which is aptly titled “Studies for Hell: I.”
The first word of “Studies for Hell: I” is the pronoun “I,” with its self-possession, yet immediately this ease is refuted as the “I” is revealed as “a hand,” or rather, one part of the human body is put forth as representative of the whole. The problem of the “I” in conveying the self is alluded to in a later poem as the speaker says, “One site of the alphabet / needs mending.” What further destabilizes readers attempting to track the identity twists that bombard them from the outset is the shift from the “I” to a “She.” But the slippery, metamorphic representations of the self do not end there, for an identity bifurcation occurs as a result:
I, a hand, reached into the sea for a piece of the sea.
What I brought out,
piece of liquid, split my hand in two.
Spilt.
And from the gash came an interpolation
fascinated with its own blood.
fascinated with its own blood.
…
She had turned around or inside out
and found herself spelt as two.
Despite the desire for “pronouns to take on the corporeal,” to accurately name and give shape to the uncanny, they resist such easy definitions for “they are like the static of a sick-dream, / almost amenable and at the same time, / frizzy, off their marks.” Readers are confronted with an uncanny other, one who is like and unlike us, a macabre Narcissus “fascinated with its own blood.” In exploring this other, the speaker envisions flesh as a possible point of entry: “Here’s a fleshy zipper / that opens in my belly, and I unzip and open and then / there I go. Inside and down the path.” Yet this approach seems too superficial and there are distinct limits:
own, I wear the blue eyes atop my own vision. I double
back my own tongue to let it taste itself.
But I taste another body’s voice.
Identical merges with identity:
one holds in one’s body (Twin, Irony, Narcissus),
like its own
trinket, a name repeated.
When one looks at the devils
nesting on the devil, one has
the impression of being caught
in a hall of mirrors.
Why is it so difficult, always, to recognize
a thing for what it is.
a thing for what it is.
The naked is flat, is a syllogism that leads
criss-cross to
a fragile repetition of its own image, called movement.
Furthermore, language as a means to navigate these shifting waters becomes suspect. In Robinson’s poems, language becomes just as slippery, unstable, deceptive, and warped as the self it attempts to name, sometimes even assisting in the permutations. With minute displacement of letters, “split” becomes “spilt” and “spelt.” In “Sanctuary,” thief and victim are conflated: “do you mind, she asked, / if I steal a bit from you.” This phrase is then “murmured to myself,” and the repetition transforms the words, “bit as in bite,” further complicating meaning. “Word after word” folds “in on itself” in self-reflexivity. The inadequacy of language to name and identify ‘self’ is represented as “pointing fingers…broken off at the stem.” Language’s destruction accelerates towards the ending of Counterpart. “Studies for Hell: II” begins with full statements:
Whoever would try to find hell
will only get lost again.
will only get lost again.
…
Some antonym, hell-like, elides with hell,
melting on your tongue.
mismap, obligation, blowhole, itching bites, gloss
synonym, synonym.
We like singed feathers. Quills. Ink.
We drew our parts with them, two-faced,
apart. Singing or singed,
…
Nacreous heat. Quills
quell
the growth.
…
Nacreous
circle hardening. Ashes,
ahs, eyes fall down.
…
re-membered in the
air hand in hand with the air.
Ere. Err. Janus-faced wing.
Though there is little doubt that Counterpart’s landscape is bleak, this desolation is not without its reassurances. The last poem’s title, “Secret Eden,” hints at this. The speaker instructs, “Speak, tongue, with your obedient quiet. Divide, / but do not be divisive.” The inherent contradiction of speaking with “obedient quiet” is partially reconciled by the calm command to “divide” but “do not be divisive” because it offers a way in which both can be held as truths: it recognizes that division does not have to be alienating. The command continues,
Now say blessing on the stem, the seed,
the orders of reproduction,
flanked on all sides by
destination.
Pronounce pulp and juice. How they divide from each other
as a fork in the road.
Friday, December 14, 2012
NEW! Poem by Maureen Thorson
Maureen Thorson
GRAY LADY
GRAY LADY
Abstracted
in the stacks,
where time
disintegrates
old news,
I won’t volunteer
to tend
the ghosts
of headlines,
rustling,
as they do,
a shade
too quietly,
even here.
Instead,
my researches
will brew
fresh happenings.
Clipped
with severe,
short strokes,
these serifed
shapes
will braid
the notes
for novels
that I’ll stew
from almanacs,
obituaries,
the want ads’
misspelled
inquiries.
I’ll sieve
the sparkle
from human
interest,
the mad
percussion
of the war
reports.
The fastest
way (but
not
the simplest)
to write
is to distort
the veil
between
homage
and theft.
Nothing’s new
beneath
the sun,
but deft
reweavings
can gleam
as near
as makes
no difference.
Hand me now
my shears—
I flex them
to the music
of the spheres.
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
NEW! Two poems by Nicole Walker
Nicole Walker
Two poems
Two poems
EL NINO
I watch the Phoenix news as if it were my own.
The swirls tell me what I already expected:
This will be a hard winter. Phoenix doesn’t know
winter but it absorbs our weather all summer long.
I watch the swirl on the ultrasound. It makes a bee-
line for my body parts. The future unwraps like an umbilicus
and I am tugged along like a turtle trapped in an ebb.
I should have built a softer shell. This one is hard to adjust.
It’s hard to take fifteen feet of snow. They predict
even more. Doppler radar is faithful to its Pacific,
its jet stream, its warm, Baja trends. The deception
lies in the big gray spirals that seem so warm and fecund.
I lie on the table and wonder what the ceiling can tell
me that the sonogram can’t. How much does one (more) life
weigh? One thousand stone or a skeleton as light
as birds? And which to prefer? Birds are so damn fragile.
I don’t want to be the one to break the news. The flat roofs
can’t handle that much snow. The ground has absorbed
all it can absorb. There should be some equation: force
equals expectation plus belief, divided by barometer.
It always disappoints, the image on the screen.
You want to see more. You want to reach in there
and touch nose, make belief out of vessel and skin.
But shadows are as reliable as wings sans feather.
In the spring I sit on the porch. The clouds gather around
the peaks like they want to nest there. A vulture
crashes against the wind in waves. I wonder what loud
omen a vulture makes—snow, rain, go home, reverse.
I need sound. If wide-eyed anticipation is butterflies
then this humming in stomach is a bevy of red worm
expectation, a hive of oh my god, a cold comb of precipitate
turning forewarning into predictable, warm rain.
BEES, KEYS, SEALED
I put my ear to her chest
to hear the murmur of the bees.
They’re stuck in there
whirring like blenders
scaling the honeycomb
of her lungs
knitting the sacs
tighter together
until the whole nest
is a plate of unmovable honey.
Monday, December 10, 2012
NEW! Poem by Molly Bendall
Molly Bendall
SEASON OF PERPETRATORS
They dream as if their plights were real, they flinch and scrape.
If speed ever once
shivered for them, if a heat thermal came pushing up,
they’d devour their own future, and they’d sell off
their fortune: one yard, one boulder.
A green gel comes between us
then springs back so the lens fades to blue, but it’s not like floating,
it’s closer,
and there’s a flap of skin. The keeper
says they’re nursing that wound.
Not a scent of threat, more like preening, more like a wedding,
coral trees assemble behind.
Flexing into thought, I’m woozy
with lateness.
Their pompadours are a tangle of magic straw.
I give way
to wide words cast on the hillside, as their pink tongues
stab the black air, rank and sinew steadfast.
SEASON OF PERPETRATORS
They dream as if their plights were real, they flinch and scrape.
If speed ever once
shivered for them, if a heat thermal came pushing up,
they’d devour their own future, and they’d sell off
their fortune: one yard, one boulder.
A green gel comes between us
then springs back so the lens fades to blue, but it’s not like floating,
it’s closer,
and there’s a flap of skin. The keeper
says they’re nursing that wound.
Not a scent of threat, more like preening, more like a wedding,
coral trees assemble behind.
Flexing into thought, I’m woozy
with lateness.
Their pompadours are a tangle of magic straw.
I give way
to wide words cast on the hillside, as their pink tongues
stab the black air, rank and sinew steadfast.
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
NEW! Poem by Maureen Thorson
Maureen Thorson
BROWNIAN MOTION
Physicist,
take heed:
A vinelet’s
dust-like
pollen,
dispersed
on ponds
in purling
streaks,
forms points
of random
increase
befitting study.
A famous
oracle
was formed
by fumes
whose molecules
resembled
these—
just so
our every
sparking
synapse swans,
producing
personality
by irregular
degrees,
selves
alterable—
up to a point—
by remembered
melodies,
unanticipated
touches,
the grand
chancy, quantum
scheme
of things.
I think—
at least,
I think I do—
that our
enraptured brains,
strung
with memes
like Christmas
trees,
garlanded
in glowing rings,
are tangled
skeins
defying
explanation.
Outlook hazy.
Try again.
From dust to dust,
we succumb
to bleak causation,
but effects
are hard to forecast:
For every bet
that loses,
one will win.
Monday, December 03, 2012
NEW! Poem by Nicole Walker
Nicole Walker
RATTLE
I bring to you, dear doctor, this mess of nests.
An intricate ball of string or white floss.
A rug woven by a woman sitting in a stall
in the mall speaking Navajo to me and
Spanish to her brother. I pull out of my pocket
a wire from the cable, the one that brought
me delicatessen and sausage McMuffin
and foiegras in Illinois even though
it’s illicit. I tell you this list
to give you some parameters
to suggest diagnosis and symptom,
cure, and preposition all in one.
I know where my trunk lies. I know where
my arms are but it’s against wind feed
and wind chill, wander zone and last pull
that I wonder. My nerves bite here and here,
they’re couched
in pork fat and goose fat, pickled
in cucumbers and red wine. They’re wrapped
up in sweater and rug and the birds that sing
softly in my ear, dear doctor, are the ones
telling me that if you could just say
the word I would leave you alone but
I hear you tripping as sadly and as quickly
as I do over nest, branch, wire, string.
If we could tease this out, dear doctor,
you wouldn’t have to listen through that cold
piece of an ear and I, dear doctor, could walk
away from here, named and meant and promised,
etched like a headstone, dear doctor. Sewn.
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