Posts for June 6, 2025 (page 15)

Registration photo of Bill Brymer for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Dollar General (Pantoum)

The old barn on the hill has given up, collapsed,
so many years neglected, it was bound to happen,
man on the porch waving as we pass,
a dying star in red pajamas, his body misshapen.

So many years neglected, it was bound to happen,
the road curves past fields carved up for sale,
a dying star in red pajamas, his body misshapen,
steely sharks circling a wounded whale.

The road curves past fields carved up for sale,
neighbors flock to the new Dollar General,
steely sharks circling a wounded whale,
moving the cemetery to make way for the mall.

Neighbors flock to the new Dollar General,
the tattered billboard boasts Jesus Saves,
moving the cemetery to make way for the mall,
we have failed the land with our selfish ways.

The tattered billboard boasts Jesus Saves,
man on the porch waving as we pass,
we have failed the land with our selfish ways,
the old barn on the hill has given up, collapsed.


Registration photo of H.A. for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Axl Rose’s Scream

primal scream echo
‘welcome to the jungle [babe]’
brought me to my knees


Registration photo of Linda Bryant for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Affair with an Actress, Flaming Out

 
Joanna was a rusty film canister
rattling in a cardboard box,
 
satin costume ripping, a crime
on stage. The last time I saw her
 
she was wearing velvet, the color
of moss after rain. I set the table
 
not knowing it would be our last
time together. We played Chinese
 
checkers, cooked turkey. After
our third flute of champagne the bomb
 
wrapped around her heart ran
to zero. I heard Mozart, falling
 
water, a screaming monkey, something
from Stravinsky,. The cracking of dry
 
log lusting for flame. She poured herself
out, gravy from the boat. Joanna began
 
her monologue, a burst of privacies.
Such deplorable offenses! Affairs
 
with character actors & stunt men. 
The domineering father despised

but always longed for. His salt & pepper

side burns, the horse whip he used to keep
 
her in line. Too many bit parts
until her life was a sequence of scraps
 
& chards. Oh the loneliness of commercials,
melancholy of the cutting room floor.
 
Joanna was all tone & vibration. Pomegranates 
splitting, frantic clacking of a kitchen whisk,
 
cracking of dry log lusting for flame.
Then her abrupt withdrawal. Candle 
 
snuffed. “You’ve seen too much,
I’ll rid myself of you,” she cried without a trace
 
of grief & in a commanding stage
voice sharp enough to shatter bone.

Category
Poem

The Hidden Woman

I grew from your heart 
The stem is still growing 
Though you witnessed its start 
You never witnessed me knowing
 
You still hold the stem, we are not far apart 
I hold the bud that has blossomed, its beauty showing
My youth was spent there, but I’m no longer in the dark 
The stem you hold is the foundation to the woman still arriving. 
 
Your hands clasped tightly, the strength never departs
Your eyes gazing upon the flower, all you give it is your caring 
As I carry on into the new year, that will be my start
The foundation of this woman, a mother loving. 

Registration photo of josephnichols.email@gmail.com Allen Nichols for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Tryst

Arise, my Love!
            The night is young
with varied verses
            to be sung
in cobbled streets
            ‘neath starry climes,
away from eyes
            & darker times.

Arise, my Love!
            Throw wide the sash!
Our kin have fallen
            one and last.
No one’s awake
            to foil our flight.
The day has dimmed
            and we are night.

Arise, my Love!
            I bid thee rise
& shame the moon–
            though vaunted high–
for candles naught
            she holds to thee
but bends her beams
            to bow a knee.

Arise, my Love!
            & we will go
to watch the waves
            where out they flow
to leave the land
            til dawn returns
& stroke the sun
            when daylight burns.

Arise, my Love!
            from far off sleep;
true dreams know naught
            of counted sheep
nor distant worlds
            where Somnus stands
but press in pairs
            & knitted hands.

Arise, my Love!
            The hour’s nigh;
the night is brief
            & breath slips by.
But time is stilled
            where lovers meet,
to whisper hope
            with lips replete.


Registration photo of Misty Skaggs for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Half Moon, Green Goo

I ain’t laid eyes on a lightning bug,
not one all spring into summer.
I figured these hillsides way out here
would be lit up, glowing with the joy
and the squishy phosphorescent goo
my little brother and I used to smear
all over our pinchy pointers and chubby thumbs
when we’d hold on a little too hard.
We just wanted to catch and release,
but life’s too short for all that
when you’re a lightning bug.
Ain’t a jar been made
 could trap your  shine.

I wanna be sitting on a porch.

My porch, built with my hand.
A single wide ain’t a home without one.
I want my porch.
A peaceful place I can sip coffee
it’s way too late to be drinking
and stareup and into the perfect half light
of a perfect half moon.
And gaze down through a green glowing cloud
blinking out messages of hope in a holler,
 encouragement never meant
for my lowly human eyes
to comprehend. 

 

 

 

 


Registration photo of Coleman Davis for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Thanksgiving Holdovers

We dropped them in an old bourbon
glass, the three extra rosemary sprigs
from November’s turkey dinner.
The glass is a Kentucky Derby souvenir
so we filled them up with water
just enough 
to cover the word MINT. 
 
Then we added a drop of Braggs apple 
cider vinegar ( I am convinced it will cure
anything but death, maybe.) & forgot them 
in the kitchen window.
 
 Sometime in January I realized that 
they had all sprouted a forest 
of algae covered roots
that looked like a calculus worksheet
that had been used for three months worth of
homework. I gently –maybe not gently– untangled
the roots & placed each into its own new 
clear glass home.
It was not a very surgical procedure 
as each was attempting to leave trailing tendrils.
 
All three resembled octopi attempting to escape 
from an aquarium –onto our kitchen counter.–
 
Eventually (even as we have surrendered
to this cape cod home, so new to us) they 
settled & grew and rooted around in the 
sunlight through the end of winter.
In May I put them in old faded Folgers dark 
roast plastic tubs half filled with red lava rocks
and dirt. Today,
 
today we had an appointment to see the doctor.
Today we had lunch near the hospital with a friend.
Today, pale violet, one of the rosemary bushlings bloomed.
Today The doctor told us we are one hundred percent cancer free.

Category
Poem

小心

a pedestrian sonnet, after Kristi Maxwell

小心 ! the small hearted branches float heavy with a fruit of men. Another one stands at the crux, reaching out to shake the branch’s hand. The leaves make a mess of wigs on all the parked cars.

All the potted GRASSES on the balcony throw their hopeful babies out into the wind.

Custard yellow afternoon, good enough to eat. Earlier, I didn’t taste the lemon cake made by the dewy-faced and recently graduated.

The irony of  两个石狮 outside of a s-bucks isn’t lost on me. Roar! 我要一杯冰的拿铁! It’s boiling out.

A pile of rocks moves very slowly up the street. 21, 20, 19, 18, across the walk, the great grey eye watches us all.

What the hell is wrong with the mosquito? Massive wolf jawbone says, SHUSH, SHUSH.

It’s hard to wheel the baby in a wheeless baby carriage. I see her, lulled to sleep and invisibility by the rush of the overpass junction and road.

A nothing quote like, “The architectural bliss of a bank, a castle, and an office building cosplaying as a bird’s nest”.

Moss atrocity, an absolute massacre of fussy green. Don’t you know I, too, love a broom that looks like a bush.

An itch haunts for days, the ankle bone a stage for a warplay. Yet, the braggadocio of ivy on cement, and all the thwacking of a life lived by the hammer, straining to hear the present, distracted from birdsong.

Signs sometimes warn us in languages we don’t speak. The round headed white man looks like he’s dipping his toes in the electric river styx, next to a blue plastic boat that used to float.

The fifth national economic crisis, no, the fifth national economic census. A census is not a crisis, but a crisis is a sort of census.

The church is under construction, no kidding

Sometimes my heart feels like a motorized tricycle piled high with scraps of styrofoam, I have to move quickly, to get out of its way 


Registration photo of Lav for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

excited and terrified.

if I can’t wear a
collar during pride month then
when can I wear it?


Registration photo of Rafael Ribeiro for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Nocturno Revisado

The frolic of she and key— 
the key of Roma City,
because in Roma, a highway,
on a highway a house,

a house, bedchambers bedded 
down with the body
of a lady in love,
who seizes the key.

Who leaps, leaping from bed, 
from chamber, 
who leaves home,
walking meanest of streets,

who seizes sword, runs 
in the night,
who passerby 
kills, out go his lights.

Who is alley to avenue 
to home, house awaiting—
who clambers to chamber,
slips in the bed,

who gently tucks the key away,
buries the sword.
Who complains of Rome’s 
population blithely sauntering by,

without their deaths, 
without night,
without key, 
without lady.

Poet: Rafael Alberti
Translation: Manny Grimaldi