Living Together
Did we really live in that apartment,
so cold in winter,
we walked around with blankets
draped around our shoulders
like cloaks.
And the furniture...
what wasn't bought at thrift sales
was a carton or a crate.
We didn't even have a shower,
washed our hair in the sink
those days when the hot was working.
A lumpy mattress,
tiny black and white TV,
meals that dog food would have shamed.
But all that worried you
was unplanned pregnancy.
Unplanned adversity
was bright and bubbly
as a child to us.
Dan Holt
Listening To Monk
The room feels smoky
The lights are dim
Nothing but the piano
and the player
Coltrane and Miles
Rollins and Powell
Listening
Watching
Learning
The piano sounding
slightly out of tune
as the chords
so precise
follow each other
one by one
The melodies so deep
so thought out
yet almost random
sounding off the top
of his head
I can see him
Thelonious
alone in San Francisco
Orman Day
Gathering Moss
A guy sharing his table
in the Costco food court
tells me he’s working two jobs
so he’ll have a comfortable retirement,
and I say he’s trading his youth for money
while I’m spending my old age remembering
when I danced the samba in Carnaval rain
and hopped a freight train to New Orleans,
so while he can, he should be a rolling stone
gathering not moss but memories.
Livio Farallo
abracadabra
there’s a noise
in the alchemy of
the
countryside. there’s a beaker
of saltwater flush
as an
ocean. i can’t dance
like a snake, so i slither
in olfactory
exhaustion and bite down hard.
the sun is a bright mountain
defy-
ing gravity: houdini with a smile. and
someone is
waiting in the siberian traps with a demitasse of dna,
ready to slurp: ready to
scald. and i am a clown
with my own nose
rid-
ing ponies like a surfboard.
a whine comes from a snowdrift,
adumbrates
a whisper, a snore, somnambulism that floats
like a ghost through
basement windows. it could be the wind murmuring “presto”.
it could be the giggling of a pint-sized giant
pulled from a hat.
but the only magic i’ve seen
is simply a hand
gun
fir-
ing backwards and a
cell phone that smokes.
Taryn Allen
Gone The midwinter-ache of absence Makes it easier to live amongst the vanishing Gives you something to focus on While time denies you closure To be the one left behind A vagueness worn like a tattooed Rorschach test Never able to attain the distance needed To resolve into the clarity of grief All those faces on the posters Bloat like dying stars beneath the rain Their light turning to papier-mache husks Singularities of rot Exerting their hollow gravity
Ma Yongbo
Merely Words
They are light switches, illuminating the dark of things,
or the withered tips and handles of things.
Between the fermenting dough of desire and the dry bread of facts,
they are an array of flames slanted in the furnace,
carving peaks, passes, and fissures on the dough’s surface.
Some words lie docile like the fur of beasts under stroking hands
trembling variegated stillness, others arrive unannounced,
as fragments of an exploded whole,
unable to reassemble the original cause or glaring force.
Not even Pygmalion’s or Midas’ fingers
could soften or harden them.
They bring the mysterious breath of all existence,
a life we’ve never lived,
even the people there cannot escape death.
For example, when I arrange these words,
the osmanthus tree outside the window grows taller, for example,
a student’s leave request note from a long-ended semester
somehow kept in my drawer, stating:
“The organization has important matters.”
And as a drained structure, it always reveals
on the damp bed of a ditch a snail’s slow confidence.
Alex Rainey Marcus Aurelius Ward
Today
-
I can see my own uncanny face reflected in the
computer screen as I write. Who is that guy, looming in the background
behind these words? I’m learning to tell the truth,
like Balaam’s ass, learning to face the truth.
But really the truth is such a small thing. It’s no big deal.
Once I stole this Bible from a motel in Idaho, in place of it I left a
note in the drawer that said “poopy pants” and in another drawer I left
another note that said “still poopy pants.” The poor cleaning person.
But I’m sure there have been worse things left in motel rooms.
This poem is starting to be about motels though I meant to
write about today, and truth, but today’s yesterday, and
tomorrow, and truth is a white bird in the blue cage of the moon.
Robin Wright
Poker Face
Now with lines
& day-old stubble
how your face
has learned
your heart’s language
better than your tongue
The quiet of your face
quells lips that shape
words into lies & shouts
Voice a relic
that tripped you
on the sidewalk
years ago & kicked
every time you spoke
Daniel Klawitter
A Message from the Poetry Tourism Bureau
Let poetry be public
And written in the streets:
Throughout this vast Republic
And wherever poets meet.
In synagogues or churches…
In mosques and Buddhist stupas.
During late night food fight urges
Over Mexican chalupas.
In city parks and country farms
May poetry be written.
To light the dark or raise alarms:
And heal the great grief-stricken.
The time for prose has ended.
The time for verse is near.
We defend the undefended:
Give out poems as souvenirs.
Unsent Love Letter
Your eyes flash brighter than any coin—
And your smile makes me feel
Like I’m part of an underground economy.
This hamburger heart has softened into tenderloin
And though there is still much to conceal
The poems I want for you defy all modesty.
But I dare not write everything down:
The curves in your dancing lips
And the white flash of your bare teeth.
I want to be the verb to your adorable noun
And no disapproving frowning can eclipse
This final myth we may never complete.
Yes, for now, all of this is mere mythology.
No river, my dear, has yet been crossed
And no fearful vow has yet been spoken.
I am a vehicle with no more velocity—
A meaningful shiver where there is no frost
And a damn door that cannot be opened.
Unless you care to knock with your considerable charm
And behold, it unlocks as you enter on your own accord
And find me there willingly disarmed:
With no more shield and no more sword.
Donna Dallas
Swallowed Up In Room 18
Second floor
just left of the wooden
warped and rotted staircase
creaked even when it was bone-still
always knew when someone was coming
paranoia settled in behind the blinds
of 18
The one chair
with a flattened
lime green cushion
round Formica table
overflowing ashtray
all the paraphernalia necessary
to keep us in
while the sun sprayed such vivid
hues through the cracked blinds
On cold nights
the furious wind howled
under the bloated moon
that ancient
splintered staircase
squeaked and groaned
as you sat in the chair
and I perched on the edge of the bed
high to the point of tormented
and sickly
we gulped water from the bathroom faucet
When the drugs were finished
we crept down the steps to meet the dealer
and rush back
to hole up in 18
for another week of wreckage