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Easter bells chime, a tradition’s gentle hum,
Easter bells chime, a tradition’s gentle hum,
If life is change
why do my days feel the same?
The sun rises, it falls,
in between I give someone
my precious time,
compromise my beliefs
to keep the peace
and the fuel gauge above E,
numb to it all
even to the ticking whiskers
of the cat-faced clock
that meows the hours
my wife hung in the kitchen
because she thought
it made sense there.
“Heaven must be a Kentucky kind of place.” – Daniel Boone
Don’t you think
the gates swing open
to a pasture, mares
grazing a green hill
at sunset, golden light
gilding wisps of mane
on the breeze, and velvet-
nosed foals to frisk
and frolic, a sky blushed
in eternal wonder, white
fences, too, not barriers
but hugs, gentle arms
to hold us, safe and warm
under one close star,
a kind, watchful eye
shining endless love?
quieting down days
not closing up surprising
expanding within
I want to be in
places where poetry and
art are breath of life
my uncle can maneuver a stick shift around the tightest of spaces. tiny u-turns in this hateful village. year after year. he managed to quit smoking when we were born. i won’t call it despite, i’ll choose to see the help. the ancient mountains every morning and the gritting cicadas every night. it started when i needed someone else to feel safe. i know this now so i’ll never do it again. how many words a day is enough to feel like i lived it? he lived it? you lived it? the sun is going to hold us darker either way. in the morning i don’t have enough breath to yell over the waves, but i still want to hear what you have to say. there’s a rusted metal vertebra in the rocky gums of the shore, gaping jaw of this bay. a singular tooth to trip on. i could jump in without you. i could jump in without anyone. i could never be alone in this water, all secret creatures circling my waist and calves. oscillating. these things live in water, isn’t that clean? isn’t that amazing? the tempo doesn’t matter as long as the air keeps flowing in, out. no oxygen mask here, just myself. you don’t have a wedding band tan line and neither does he. neither do i. i don’t need to be naked to be vulnerable. not everyone knows that. hauling my body out into the late june breeze, licked by new friend. breeze familiar but never met this exact one before. never will again. every younger face on my skull, my friend. my friend.
at the sight
of speckled fawn
bedded down in
forest grass
easy prey
ripe for the picking
the doe does not
know you are around
first bite-
canid teeth sink in
blood smeared coat
griffling rough
three short bleats
silent jawed
teeth sink in
a little deeper
as much blood
as this spotted
baby can afford to spill
the scent of lessen
redbound lessons
less than seven days old
a limpen wound
will slow you down
as the pierced hole
closes on its own
the cry does echo
through the woods
and is lost to time
in diminishing circles
in waves of sound
as spotted fawn
stays crumple-
dazed
blooded
bloodled
bloodlust
brought you down
an exhibit spread out upon a table,
not etherized, no need for these long-
dead scholars, some of whom stare
down at me from somber portraits,
or even scowl,
as if to ask what are you doing here among us?
Luke Wadding,
Matthew ab Aquasparta,
Fidelis a Fanna—
scholastic magistri
searching nature and illumination,
cause and causality,
being and existence,
I have glimpsed them in these days
of living among them but not
of them, my own scholastic paradox.
I have crept into Plato’s cave
and spied the shadows and
discerned the grand scope
of all that’s hidden in these
brittle tomes, open here on the table,
perhaps even breathing,
through dust and distance,
their undying spirits.
I sink inside myself, into poems—
Into mud of words to avoid the hot sun.
The inevitability beats down and I thirst;
I make promises to poetry about growth:
I promise to eat cake in front of the fridge
and curse instead of putting my head
in the oven. I promise to splurge on adjectives,
not love. I promise to chew up all my letters
as not to forget.
I whisper to the books and Anne laughs at me,
dares me to get meticulous.
She’s waiting for me
to go mad properly. I promise her
to cut myself up and out.Remove myself completely.
I promise to shut up and read.
And read, and reread for clarity, then write
without purpose. I promise to cauterize
the doubt until it’s an ink blot blood clot
And I am soaking in fear of
What might be written next— I choke on the sweetness
and the ache.
I have never known what love is.
I have never been so angry.
My grandmother
switched from Schlitz to Michelob
from single pearl earrings to mod clip-ons,
from Pall Malls to long menthols
She drove Route 66 to Vegas
subscribed to B-movie mags
more Mamie Van Doren
than Marilyn Monroe, her curly blue-
rinsed hair flew like a swallow
traversing the Mississippi Flyway
She ditched pillbox hats
& tailored Jackie Kennedy suits
for polyester pants & permanent pressed
tops — geometric mazes, lava lamp swirls
neon bouquets, polka dots
the size of ping pong balls
She joined the Church of Velour
& never again ironed wrinkled shirts
wiggled into a Sunday dress
or confessed in a cloistered booth
Defined by her walk-in closets & rhinestones,
we buried her in a silk-lined knock-off
Valentino gold pantsuit and double
string of polished pink simulated pearls.
I haven’t heard
from him since Maman’s entire life shipped
frozen—ropes frayed, packages whistling
in the cracked box crammed
with clothes, moth balls, and dried fruits
from last season. She had barked, were you rocked
near a wall? swiping the ladle from me, stirring
the crème fraiche and butter, adding
mollusks, and I swear,
a little cider, a little salt,
then a measure of wine to break
open before dinner, I say damn!
Damn. The smells before Maman’s cancer came:
Laertes, her chihuahua, and the nameless scent
of a hospital, only she died
at home, feathers beating, angels singing
Descartes backwards, I am therefore I think!
Keeping my distance from her, I’ve stood
on fields and vast American mountains fretted
with trees. Cabins my cafés and wind swept
memories—then the snow-caps of winter frozen
blue like North Seas—never lucky.
I think therefore I am in this terrible mood.
They kept
ortolans and ravens—gray and night—
and the pale flicker of candlelight slowed
her heartbeat under her ribs.
I could not sense when her spirit flew,
but Papa kept
affairs regular in their silence.
Everyone in that room was a bird.
Eyes and talons so still you could see yourselves.