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Sunday, March 22, 2015

John Grey--Lucid Among Snow and Snakes--Do Not Ask If He Or She Still Loves You....

CHOP WOOD

Kitchen table. Mid-January.
Sugar dissolves in coffee.
Sweetens the bitterness.

Your face. Your mouth.
They aren't going to the same lengths any more.
They're content to occasionally toss out an opinion.

Snow smothers the yard and beyond.
It's day out but it creeps around like darkness.
It's as if we haven't woken yet.
As if life is one long delayed reaction to being born.

I will need to make tracks in that snow.
The perfect surface can't last forever.

I have a job to do.
Chop wood. Sweep up the shadows.
You will merely muse.
Spend the day basically philosophical.

I’ll be up to my knees in that white stuff.
It turns the simplest sprint into a marathon.
I will not ask myself
"Do you still love me?"
Not with the wind so bitter.
Not with the details buried,
the temperature imprudent.


RENTED APARTMENT

night of the roach invasion
brown army
your disgust yanked tight,
our sacred goods profaned -
my love of all living things giving ground
even before the first spray,
the volley of rolled-up newspaper -

kitchen tiles like living mosaics -
I stomped,
you swatted -
an hour's glimpse at what we're both prepared to do

we swept up the bodies -
you're all invited to our house-warming party -
just picture the battles behind all this -
imagine the brooms.

 
SNAKE IN THE GRASS

Faint hissing from an unknown path;
a snake - the hunger of the body
that never questions.

I close my eyes.
I listen. I hear.
Lucidity.
The snake moves its secret mass.
In tall grass, I hail shudder and glide.

Don't worry.
I won't give you away.
Besides, you grip me between your jaws.
You show me glimpses
of the long dark tunnel to your stomach,
I feel your breath,
the acids of down below.

So let our shared compassion on this night
relax the both of us.
Your slither is no dagger.
My long blue shadow bears no axe.


John Grey is an Australian born poet. Recently published in Oyez Review, Rockhurst Review and Spindrift with work upcoming in New Plains Review, Big Muddy Review, Willow Review and Louisiana Literature.   

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Anne Whitehouse--Loosening the Phylactery, But Keeping the Sanctity

PRESERVES             

Cooking berries with sugar,
I stand over a hot stove on a hot day.
Steam of summer’s sweet essence
curls up my nostrils.

I stir my jam,
and in the mind’s inner eye
I see a procession
of brightly-colored gliders
like human butterflies
climbing the thermals
over Brace Field,
soaring over Oblong Valley,

where the crickets deepen their song
as the morning advances,
and fields of corn and hay
are growing dark and ripening.
Vines tangle in the wetlands,
fireflies glimmer after twilight,
and the deer are watchful.

High in the Green Mountains,
surrounded by forest, open to the sky,
underground springs feed the crystal lake.
On the surface swims a loon.
We float on our backs,
gazing at the clouds and sky,
cradled by water caressing us like silk.

Here, where the forest keeps the secrets
of our younger selves.



REMEMBERING CORA

I remember how Cora said fiercely,
concerned for her daughter,
“Well, her mother has cancer,”
as if it were her failing
instead of affliction.
The family tragedy,
her brother’s malady,
was turning her bones
to cottage cheese.
Her skeleton self-destructed,
but her spirit soared far away
to the Rockies and the Sierras,
to Florence, Paris, and Rome.
“Cora was fun, and I was along
for the ride,” said her husband
of the only non-lawyer
who’d bested him in argument.
She knew how to respond
to a challenge,
ruthlessly rallying her forces
with chemotherapy’s
destructive weapons.
But God had other plans.
And her daughter sat at the shiva 
with bent head bearing her grief,
her long legs twisted around each other,
her feet huddled for comfort
in fuzzy slippers.


AFTER IRENE

After the storm passed,
and the rain stopped,
and the wind at last died down,
night fell, warm, velvety,
and moonless.
                        In the morning,
the sun gilded all it touched
in cleansed and glistening air,
and the plants of the earth
sprang back to life.
                        Lying about
were fallen trees and broken branches,
downed power lines and wrecked buildings.
The waters no longer raged,
the floods were receding.
We went about repairing the damage,
finding what was essential,
how to survive.




THE DECISIVE MOMENT

                                   
The decisive moment, it is the simultaneous recognition, in a fraction of a second, of the significance of an event as well as the precise organization of forms, which gives that event its proper expression.
                                                                                    -Henri Cartier-Bresson


On a glorious June evening
after the retrospective exhibit
of Cartier-Bresson’s world-spanning art,
I strolled into Central Park,
and left the path to climb the rock.

Below me, a woman approached the arch under a bridge
trailing two leashes connected to twin beagles.
The heightened perspective, the swirls of motion
made a picture Henri might have taken.

Early summer light, bright but not blinding,
warm but not hot. It went through me,
tinting my mind like wine through water.

My vision created frames as I walked,
keeping violent emotions at bay,
where what seems threatening
can be studied from an inner distance,
like the way one walks around a sculpture
to view it from all angles.

No matter how tenuous I think are the ties
that bind me to the miserable past,
I am not deceived;
heartstrings can be played on,
and twist and tighten
at a moment’s notice,
like a devilish phylactery
strangling the life out of me.

Surprising the pain that endures
or perhaps not strange—
enmeshed in desperate, unequal trials
I had no chance of winning,
I buried my feelings so deep
I couldn’t find them
and turned my heart to stone,
that slowly is softening.



Anne Whitehouse is the author of five poetry collections—THE SURVEYOR’S HAND, BLESSINGS AND CURSES, BEAR IN MIND, ONE SUNDAY MORNING, and THE REFRAIN, as well as a novel, FALL LOVE. I was born and raised in Birmingham, Alabama, and live in New York City. My poetry, fiction, reviews, and articles are published widely. www.annewhitehouse.com

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Christina Murphy: Palominos by Starlight

Itineraries

I.

an affirmation originating in starlight
and sometimes staying all night

the here and now from the then and there—
unified, more or less, or flying

away in the wind, a structure of time
situated in a puzzle of monumental changes

II.

metallic city weather, halos on the pavement;
the simple remorse of torrential rain cresting

identity adds up the losses merging into
the long blue hum of a highway dawn

a deserted pasture in morning light, a quiet breeze
suggesting anything, even freedom, might be possible


Glorioso

The false edges of sympathy frequently ask questions and map the scene of the accident. The old painter’s still life obscures the angels in the background like kewpie dolls, ripe for the kissing.

Faith is glossy and durable and spins both ways on a moment’s notice. If you ride a palomino into the wilderness, you might mix champagne with moonlight and drink golden tears.

No matter how many times wrought iron circles offer sanctuary, only anomalies of form and spirit will be protected.

Resist the urge to gaze into glistening water. The glass slipper in the wishing well is seldom the answer to unanswered prayers.




Christina Murphy’s poetry is an exploration of consciousness as subjective experience, and her poems appear in a wide range of journals and anthologies, including, in PANK, La Fovea, Dali’s Lovechild, and Hermeneutic Chaos Literary Journal, and in the anthologies Let the Sea Find its Edges and Remaking Moby-Dick. Her work has been nominated multiple times for the Pushcart Prize and for the Best of the Net Anthology.

Monday, March 2, 2015

Joey Madia, Ornithomancer Masquerading as Playwright

Soul Sutra

Hunkered down
In the mid-winter clay
My soul aligns
With the fire-pit flame.


 A Poem for Proserpines

The ragged stone angel
patiently at prayer
looks homeward
and away
from the patiently prowling wolf
rabid at her feet.

Its psychic stare
no longer piercing
its slack-jawed patty-cake
within the sanctuary
of her plump
and plastered
thigh.

She moans in Heaven's rapture

Sighing.

sighing…

ever, ever sighing.

Then sighing
Nevermore.

She turns her marble gaze
to the Proserpines
of pomegranates.

To the Beatrices and Magadalens
to the Annabels and Helens
(only Goethe's—
never Faust's)

To the Lolitas and Lauras
nursing sanguine wounds.

She flutters her pitted, seeded wings
in the subtle motions of stone
and gazes onward
toward the temple of the Mystics
New and barely known.

Where Anastasia awakens
to the mind-locked remembrance
of a mad, en-trancing monk
tracing whispered mantras
upon her sanguine thighs.

Is she weeping for the child?
Will the child weep for her?



Alchemy IV 

Passage thru to yellow shores.
Coves resplendent. Irregular. Transcendent.
 
Descend.

A traveler on island plains awakes.
He will once again arise, un-nesting the new mystics—
a baptism in branches—
Elliptical. Concealed. Re-formed.

Borne on high, the eagled, ancient hawk-rite
dances a glittered shaman’s trance.
Icarus in a wax stance.
Constructing molten mantra magic for the meek ones,
Westward falling.

The candles which they lit.

Worlds within a carbon tip.

Clean to burn.

Immaculate.

Messengers carry the birth words on smoke wings
to the far-earth islands, seeking new rhythms,
tribal meanings.
Rituals elaborate. Convex. Tantric
in their bean/corn/cocoa symbologies.

The simplicity of birth
 is a breath    a wish      a death.

Kali, in her manner, lends the love blade to carve the optic wound—
(a thought     a bird      a groove).
Imbedded/emplaced remains embrace brain-game embolisms,
fraying in the air—
Wistful and Alone.

Fast, but eat the Logos.
There is no scent but cinnamon;
no fatted calf
but you, yourself, sacrificed.

The tangy sting we taste is winter ginger’s folly.

Gone at last are the sickly, whimsical wishes of elder enemy kings.
The Regent’s humble design is neatly knotted pine—

Resplendent. Irregular. Transcendent.

Ascend.

The stone road offers clues to sacral, yellow shores.

A crow’s mask guides the mast.

Soft, to pay for passage.

Time now to Embark.


Joey Madia is a teaching-artist, writer, director, and actor. His poetry, essays, and short stories have been widely published and have earned him several awards. He is the Artistic Director/Resident Playwright of Seven Stories Theatre Company, Inc. (which just celebrated its tenth anniversary) and Resident Playwright at Youth Stages, LLC. Although he has written several main stage musicals and dramas, he specializes in social justice theatre and participatory plays for youth. His 17 plays for young audiences have been produced across the United States and he has two plays in the Dramatic Publishing catalog. He is the author of four books on using theatre in the classroom (The Stage Learning Series, Accompany Publishing, 2007). He has written and performed pieces about Civil War captains Louis Emilio and Thomas Maulsby and is a Chautauqua Scholar for Voices from the Earth, which does symposia and performances on the African American experience in the Civil War.  As a teaching-artist he has taught and mentored thousands of students in both theatre and creative writing and has spoken at many schools and national conferences. He has worked with organizations including The Epilepsy Foundation of NJ and Camp NOVA to bring theatre to students with disabilities and has won three writing awards from Very Special Arts of NJ. He has appeared in or directed over 100 plays and in a dozen projects on camera, including the 2014 remake of White Zombie. His first novel, Jester-Knight, was published in February 2009 (New Mystics Enterprises). His second novel, Minor Confessions of an Angel Falling Upward was published in September 2012 (Burning Bulb Publishing). He is a book and music reviewer and the founding editor of www.newmystics.com, a literary site.

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Ali Znaidi and The Blues of Anti-Destruction

The Creative Anarchy of X

Mallets awaken the xylophone.
Between the wooden bars the X sinks.
Only chaotic polyphonies are heard
through the horizontal crackle of the slats.
& the shepherd is only interested in x-raying
that recently dead scabietic goat.
& his fingers have just awakened the xylophones
(incorporated in her rib cage) before the worms do so
because he wants to listen to the melodies of the sinking X.
—Blueprints for a structural chaos of his blues.


Reverberating Nostalgia

Nostalgia reverberates back & forth
like the ebb & tide [input/output].

Aided by the might of a stylus [a palimpsest]
the tidal flow configures & reconfigures
that avalanche of coastal rocks, building
its integrity as the foe of destruction.




Ali Znaidi (b.1977) lives in Redeyef, Tunisia, where he teaches English. His work has appeared in various magazines and journals worldwide. He authored four poetry chapbooks including Experimental Ruminations (Fowlpox Press, 2012), Moon’s Cloth Embroidered with Poems (Origami Poems Project, 2012), Bye, Donna Summer! (Fowlpox Press, 2014), and Taste of the Edge (Kind of a Hurricane Press, 2014). He also authored a fiction book titled Green Cemetery (Moment Publications, 2014) which is in fact the first Tunisian flash fiction collection originally written & published in the English language. Some of his poems have been translated into German, Greek, Turkish and Italian. You can see more of his work on his blog at aliznaidi.blogspot.com.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Neil Ellman, Aficionado of Ekphrasis

Valium

(Damien Hirst, painting)

Folded like an origami bird
my mind unfolds
to count the spots—1, 2
yellow red and blue
3, 4 sparking
on a color wheel
5, 6 a hundred planets
in a hundred orbs
around the sun
I choose the ones
that put my mind
my universe
the passage of the stars
across my eyes
to rest.


Abelone Acetone Powder

(Damien Hirst, painting)

White dwarfs
luminous and blue
reds yellows greens
one by one by one
Rigel and Regulus
side by side
before the end
the stars await
aligned in even rows
equals at the last
in their silence know
the final coming
is at hand.


Botulinium Toxin A

(Damien Hirst, painting)

Biology dictates
chemistry directs
mathematics orders
our place in the chaos
of the universe
lined up one by one
never touching
equidistant from the sun
as obedient slaves
to the gods of evolution
entropy and decay
we march lock-step
shoulder to shoulder
never knowing when
but certain that the end
will come.

Neil Ellman, a poet from New Jersey, has published more than 1,000 poems, many of which are ekphrastic and written in response to works of modern and contemporary art, in print and online journals, anthologies and chapbooks throughout the world.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Leonard Gontarek: Sentinel On The Edges of Light and Shadow, Substance and Ethereal

Laundry                                                                    

1

All I know is each year
there were ducks on the iced tea of the lake.

All I know is I can reach God
as easily as a stone through stained
glass lit from inside at evening.

How long does it to return the dead from a crash?
How long does it take to make our way back?

All I know is idiots are trying to
steal the moonlight, and by idiots
I mean one or two, and that is
in the world of letters alone.                                                 

Windows, floating, shake like laundry on the water.

Terraces were never meant for this.
He was never meant to be a terrorist.


2

Sandy the fireworks are hailing over Little Eden tonight.
I like my fireworks filmed with a drone.
American Apparel issues
apology after posting picture
of Challenger explosion
as fireworks, apologizes
for posting Challenger
disaster as clouds.
Hey, Sandy, my, my, my.


Serenade                   

1

We buried my sister in secret.
We mourned in secret.
We mourned at night.
In nasty sunlight, too, we mourned.

We walked slow, but the slowest
was a stranger, and she was weeping, and lost.
My sister was just ashes in a beautiful box with two stone angels.
She was brought to church in a silver BMW.

We ate miniature cakes and coffee that was too hot,
and that was right.
We listened to Longfellow Serenade.
I don’t remember if it rained.

Someone asked if it rained because rain
is good luck at a funeral.
I don’t remember.
What kind of good luck can the dead have.                          


2

The relation to death
regardless of being and nothingness
is an exception,
seeing as in Plato,

toward as in Heidegger,                                
is not made up
of an uneasiness with regard
to the unknown.


Death is empirical.
I must answer.
The Other was a sign
one will never be even.

Today I draw from all this
that sadness must shy away from everything.


3

The source spoke on condition
of anonymity
because they were not authorized to discuss
the investigation publicly.

Place                                                  

1

The light spills from place to place.
The children ask why aren’t there any dinosaurs?
The children ask why are there so many languages?
The children ask why is that man homeless?

2

The light spills from place to place,
among flowers and stones.
What can be done?
Fences. Tall, gold, glittering, barbed.

3

The children ask why do people get sick?
The children ask why do grown-ups sometimes cry when they’re happy?
The children ask why do the kids next door have more toys than we do?                       
The children ask why do I have to invite that girl to my party?

4

The shadow of a cloud
passing like a plane
penned in the field.
Alive, light returns.

The light is hungry.
The light needs us.
Light is huge, an issue,
in the united hate of America.


Real                                                   

1

For the past hour,
war and peace for beginners, for you.

In the pane of late light, metal, pointillist,
if the book is called Predestination,
precede to the last page, lick your fingertip.

Everywhere, face in pool, clear, laconic.
Everyone died in this pond in the nineteenth century.
I accept that.

Out the window, wouldn’t you say in the middle of that
uncontestable joy, is sorrow? Makes you sad.
It is sad. I can’t explain. I follow the lovely wild horses
with my eyes. They become lost in the shadow of mountain and then, darkness.
I love the way that happens. But who can be certain, when it comes to imagery.

I have problems with everything and it is deep-seated, you say.
I have problems with you, you say. That has always hurt.

Afterwards, a mist comes off the body. A process we constantly interrupt.

Your mother sang spells.
The light – it was artificial and inappropriate – mixed with the powder in the limbs.
Your father put his head down on the sofa and wept.
You referred to truth as intel.
That seemed inappropriate, to reduce the findings of the world to slang.

For something like a second, cold sandwich.

My face in the mirror, strange and blue, fluorescent.
The reflected trees fill in with graffiti. What am I getting around to, loneliness.
For something like a second, of the passengers, faces.

I read the titles of the novels not the text.
No way, you said, not you of all people.
What makes you hyper? That makes me hyper.
The highway is for blurry trees and blurry stars, tonight.

Everything is out of reach. Everything is too high.

2

It is love and pain, baby, I would think, the shining within the mist today, that signals it will be
a good day, we understand, when we assess the figure in the mirror in the morning, who we concede,
has looked better, has possessed more contentment, the bones hidden in beauty and clothes demonstrate
taste, or a sense of it, is what we are given and it is enough, illumination, that is what it is about,
the feet glisten and become light, soon the body follows and with that the head which equals heart,
what we see in the glass may appear like a tree burning, this, I suggest, is joy, rushing to meet up with us,
whether at the end of a summer or an unforgettable snowfall, whether standing outside the fence of the
cemetery you passed every day on the way to school, the ghostly shape in the window of the closed
caretaker’s house, whether sitting in the square wading, like everyone, in six inches of shadow, waiting
for the dark birds to drift and spark, the coming evening tingeing the sculpture orange, low metal clouds,
it is all right, this is x, the beginning of wisdom or knowledge or something closely approximating it,
as close to our liking as we can expect, we conclude, everything from here has a chance to stand in the
soft light, or be moved into it.


3

I read about disappearing, a long time.
Notice, you don’t see passengers drop to their knees on the subway at 6 PM.
Notice Alaska’s republican senator wears an Incredible Hulk tie. I’m sure I don’t understand.
Sometimes they just make the hands of writers disappear.
Other times, a boy saves up his money to be with a prostitute.
Your poetry must not be greater than your doubt.
I hear the carnival music on the earth. Oh, lost, shiny objects.
Seconds on the chocolate cake. It’s like 452 degrees in here.
There’s nothing, the next morning, but holes where they drove in the pegs.
I thought they would thank me for writing about them.
I thought they’d be grateful for chronicling their terrible fortune.
Brings forth, next morning, a froth of scum and sweet leaves on the river.
The death of the novel and God suits me.
The ladder is too small. The post-modern art, too high.
The snow is blue acrylic, you may as well paint over this night.
Your car, never what has been hijacked. May not be stolen.
Which is the point. The dots reassemble.
You may initially experience resistance, this is normal.
If it persists, you should see someone.
You could see who I’m seeing, but I don’t know.
Light is a slave trade, clobbered with nightsticks.
Take this on faith, not mine. The earth is tiny demands.
Under the sycamores, under the burgundy Japanese trees.
The dogs in the garden and the statues don’t ask for peace.
What will it take to get you to hold me like a marble Madonna, like the wind holds my cats in summer?
The wind goes through like something invisible.
You can tell it really knows how to die, the wind.
A real God would understand.
Cosmos, snow-drop, wet tulip, broken film, time-lapse borealis. Colorful lumber fallen in the field.
This can’t be the world we wished for.
There is much I don’t know.
There is much I don’t know about myself.
Does that make me imprecise? Make this less true?
I am an incomplete idiot? Almost total failure?
Both wings never work at the same time. Of this I am pretty sure.
Longing is vague and it is long, almost a lifetime.
There is much I don’t know of how the world works, I am the first to admit.                                              

4
           
The ship is moored to August.
They are crowding the ship.
They have carried chests
of ice and cartons of bourbon
that tastes like southern dusks

leaked through leaves and branches
because that is what they
have been told.
The bourbon will make the tears
come easier and when they come,

it will make the sorrow of those tears
easier to bear. They will not
weep only. They will dance.
They are bad dancers, but they
are dancing with death so it doesn’t matter.

The trees will bleed. The future will appear empty.
It will be difficult to say if they are sad or happy
and they will have whiskey on their breath.


5

Do two things ever come together,
like the virtual joy and the real bourbon above?
Probably not,
but it is not a thing we can ever know.


Branches                   


1

When I looked out across the sea of death
against a littleness
myself.    Gilgamesh


2

Attention please.


3

When the soul lies down in the grass.

4

When the soul lies down in moon slide & Philadelphia,
eerie, lit paulowania, strange moths in lonely trees,
Iraq will be dark.

5

When the soul lies down,
a scythe fills the field.

It snows through the bars of the cell.

The cup I drink from tastes like zinc.                       

I rattle for the guard for I don’t know what.

I would not be alone if he were here.

What endures is explanations
& beauty, epitaphs on a scrabble board. My crown rusts.

In the world of trees, the birds squabble & make up,
I can only imagine.

Maybe War is not the answer.

A lumber truck, speeding downhill, overturns the Northern Lights.
God & dusk dismount.

When the soul lies down in the grass,
one taps a glass over & over on table top.

6

The Speaker obviously believes
the use of those words
was inappropriate,
as is trying to raise money
off the situation.

7

He's being absurd. But that's, you know,
an entertainer can be absurd.

8

Katy Perry, she’s kind of annoying, right?
Yeah, but I’m kind of in love with her.

9

It's not the language I would have used,
but I'm focusing on the issues
that I think are significant
in the country today.


10

Show a little faith.


11

Not to
tell lies
steal kill
not to
& so forth.

Try telling that to the woman you are pulling toward your body.
It is the perfume that is the appeal.


12

In God’s case, it is the perfume that is the appeal.
Light deranged in His branches.
The will of love is never empty, the call.


13

Show a little faith.

14

Evil can be scooped out like bacteria.
There is, of course, changing it.

Making a banner that flows, you can follow.
Ah, there is a reason to press your lips: her ring, her knuckles.


15

Show a little faith,
there’s magic in the night.


Leonard Gontarek’s recent books are He Looked Beyond My Faults and Saw My Needs
and Déjà vu Diner. His poems have appeared in The Best American Poetry,
Joyful Noise! An Anthology of American Spiritual Poetry, The Working Poet,
American Poetry Review, Fence, Field, Verse, Poet Lore, Spinning Jenny, and as a tattoo.
He coordinates Peace/Works and hosts The Green Line Reading and Interview Series.
He was the 2011 Philadelphia Literary Death Match Champion and recipient of the
2014 Philadelphia Writers Conference Community Service Award. His poems have

been translated into Italian and Romanian.    www.leafscape.org/LeonardGontarek