Thursday 25 April 2024

Bardspell - Prose Poem by Greg Patrick

 



Bardspell


Prose Poem

By Greg Patrick

 

“Every life is in many days, day after day. We walk through ourselves, meeting robbers, ghosts, giants, old men, young men, wives, widows, brothers-in-love, but always meeting ourselves.”
― James Joyce, 
Ulysses

 

When the raucous laughter rang too hollow upon the inn’s walls and too great the solitude of the

void left by the throng intruded the party looked to the empty shadows by the hearth.

“Wherever is the bard this eve?” it was asked.

As if the shadows massing at the threshold were granted form and face, one who was both

mirage and nomad was conjured forth it seemed like a ghost. It was not song alone he ushered

in but a potent eloquential silence and a sigh that does not lie betrayed in its cadence a broken

duet supplied now only by echoes. The night belongs to the poet with the unbroken dawn in his

eyes and words.

Because a bard’s eyes know there is a greater emptiness and void than chairs to fill. His words

are like the laughter of the curious passerby in the night that fill the dark and outside with

laughter. Will there to be light by word and the dark is only that. Nothing more.

In the beginning as in the end there is the word to confront the emptiness out there to the creative

voice.

A gift. A curse? A fulfilment of emptiness?

Either way the bard steps to the light like a soloist by the crossroad's lantern and allow others

that light and voice between intervals of dark.

But his muse…Where was she this eve? Her voice like that of a falconer, so uplifting... the one

voice that could bring him down to earth. Though mastery of the art preceded him there was

something expressive in the entrance of all who crossed the threshold, each arriving with their

own story to listen to the bard’s great ones retold. Their postures like notes of a song broodings

of hate and love of jubilance and despair.

Silence greeted his appearance like one after words of truth that only came out during anger.

Haggard and disheveled as an almseeker yet noble in his bearing as a god by another guise

testing the hearts of mortals. Against a background of chill rain like a hailing of a silver tribute

upon a dark prince he lingered at the threshold like forbidden words wavering on the lips.

Like a ghost reacquainted with the mortal world blinking in the firelight and his expressive eyes

betrays his trade like a metallurgy left untended in the fire and crucible too long by a careless

hand. His gaze ablaze with a Promethean enlightenment destined to chains.

Dark eyes like a lightless predecessor to fire closed savouring where cold of night met habitation

of fire ere he crossed to the light and eyes accustomed to darkness saw those waiting in

silhouette like angelic figures awaiting a new arrival to hallowed halls.

His tattered raiment like Icaran moth wings seared by the light, betraying a man burnt by

radiance beyond his reach, flared like rebel angel wings inviting metamorphosis from the listless

intoxication of patrons to Renaissance of being and reawakening of greater thirst than even the

castaway knows who at last succumbs to drinking the sea. From messages in bottles

bidding one to forget. The words by contrast dared them see and forsake the bottle as a

sieve...mirroring facades that seem suspended in a glacial tear.

He closed his eyes into the song, his touch beckoning on the strings as if trying to draw the

moment in time back. Searching look betrayed in a gaze upon another’s face bearing haunting

semblance to his muse but the words ceased mid-song for they belonged to but one under the

skies. Sonorous in a way few can fathom, save if they listen with the undelved heart.

The tenacity of dream’s embrace when one has to part ways and of what followed: broken chords

and drawn swords...words lost to time like heretical ideals cast to the pyre for the world has

changed though he would not.

The brazier-lit flames had long since dwindled...time to his rhyme lost all meaning to his

spellbound audience whose conversation had ceased of its own accord like the lowing of a herd

sensing the presence of the untamed and hunter in their midst. And no glasses raised that would

hold unbidden memory at bay-they thirsted now for something else the more keenly-knew the

thirst of the nomad for the oasis and beheld the desert surrounding them for the first time.

The bard’s words like a table’s candles brought in a tray became like the dualism of flame-

warming benignly then burning-holding shadow at bay but borne in the torches of a dark army-

cast at the wielder of burning words in a world playing with fire.

From aerial vantage point he seemed to have been up lifted by words like the guardian of a lofty

tower holding impassive vigil over siege fires allowing none close except for the intrusion of

names and faces in moonlight recollection.

The chords and lines drawn like a dreamcatcher strung over a loved one’s cot. Like dream

differed and nightmare gazing like two separated lovers between dividing chords of the

dreamcatcher words of endearment between a rebel cell’s bars. Like a political prisoner of a

queen’s heart. Like one lost in a maze so captivating the gaze.

Like blind bard Homer called back for there are heroes yet unsung in the new worlds beyond the

mariner’s eyes on the eternal horizons beyond the wakes.

Like a shadow enthroned he stepped to the harp and like two rival councils the hearth fire and

shadow flanked him. The dark caress of shadow and the serpentine patterns of flame were cast

over his face like snakes charmed by his song.





Greg Patrick - A dual citizen of Ireland and the states, Greg Patrick is an Irish/Armenian traveller poet and the son of a Navy enlisted man. He is also a former Humanitarian aid worker who worked with great horses for years and loves the wilds of Connemara and Galway in the rain where he's written many stories. Greg spent his youth in the South Pacific and Europe and currently resides in Galway, Ireland and sometimes the states.

 


One Poem by Avantika Vijay Singh

 





Indian Coral Tree


Floating in the misty white fog

Like hushed Viking longships at sea...

Are the radiant red flowers agog

Blooming on the Indian coral tree.



Seated like oars of the longship

On the leafless silver bark tree...

Are the bright crimson flowers crisp

Blooming on the Indian coral tree.



With their cheer, making my heart sing,

In the bleakness of winter's sea...

Are these beacons of hope for spring,

Blooming on the Indian coral tree.



Floating in the misty white fog...

Blooming on the Indian coral tree...





Avantika Vijay Singh is a writer, poet, blogger, editor, researcher, and amateur photographer with experience of working in both, the corporate and social sectors. She is the author of the anthologies Flowing...in the river of Life and Dancing Motes of Starlight (an e-book) and the blog Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives in the Times of India. She was awarded the Nissim International Award 2023 Runners-Up for Poetry. Her work has been published nationally and internationally.

Two Poems by Dibran Fylli - Translated by Biswanda Sihna

 



LIKE IN A DREAM

 

On the moonless night

Let's talk about school grades

Tidying up the assignment line

with the theme for love.

 

As in a dream

Under your body my eye slipped

In the oasis Strait stopped

There in the glowing ocean

in the restless night.

 

The stars in the sky move in bursts

The moon turned red and began

A night as long as a century.

The darkness of the night

like an arrow kills.

 

I look at your brown hair

with the braid behind the back

In the oasis of the Strait

This moonless night

I don't hesitate to drown.

in the scorching ocean.


..

I WILL BE LOOKING FOR YOU...!

 

I'll look for you there

Where love never ceases to exist 

And relax there

Where we wrote love letters;

 

I'll look for you there

Where the sun rises but reluctant to set

For a steady romantic walk 

And pluck flowers on the beautiful meadows;

 

I'll look for you there

Where the picturesque mountains 

Like to host eternal lovers like You and Me 

And dance in the freshness of the breeze 

When only the leaves rustle;

 

You know, 

I was absolutely amazed while waiting for you 

In all the places I loved to be there 

And my soul got invaded 

By the awesome silence of the green fields

Among the witnessing poppies;

 

I wonder, 

The night took me away 

In its lap all of a sudden 

And I cherish the memories 

That's only yours and mine 

Your smiling face leads the show

As it had been as always before 

I can never forget you

Be it today 

Be it tomorrow

As I love to remember you 

Ever forever!

 

(Translated by Biswanda Sihna)





Dibran Fylli was born in Kosovo. He is a director, actor, poet, writer, Academician, Editor-in-Chief of the prestigious international magazine Orfeu. Dibran Fylli has won many awards. He fought with (UCK), the Army for the liberation of Kosovo from the Serbs who killed many women, children and elderly people. He was seriously injured. He wrote the book translated into 9 languages ​​for the Great Martyr Commander of the UCK Adem Jashari. Dibran Fylli has made many films as a director and actor.

Felix and Ahmed: Conquaerere AND Educere - Short Story by Duane L Herrmann

 



Felix and Ahmed: Conquaerere AND Educere


Short Story

by Duane L Herrmann


    “Did you hear of the tragedy at Lindisfarne, Britannia last month?”

    “No.  What happened?

    “It was horrible.  Barbarians, called themselves Vikings, attacked the university there.”

    “No!” Felix was aghast to hear this news. He and Ahmed, dons of the University of Nocabulabet, were walking through the quadrangle to evening prayers. Being laid out in good Roman fashion, the university was in the center of the city. Being the capital of the State of Branden, named for its founder nearly three centuries earlier, the university filled half the city center, the capital complex filled the remainder. The location was pleasant, overlooking the Moshassuck River just above joining with the Woonasquatucket.

    Felix was just as proud of his Narragansett heritage as Ahmed was of his Wampanoag. They had been friends for several years. Both had been teaching for about a decade, he, Roman Federal history and Ahmed, Islamic Jurisprudence.

    “They burned the Great Mosque of Lindisfarne,” Ahmed continued. “But hadn’t made their way to the university, or its Library, before the Legion came and defeated them.”

    “Thank Caesar for that!”

    “The Great Mosque can be repaired. Only by the Grace of Allah was the Library spared. What a disaster that would have been!”

    “Yes,” Felix agreed. “Especially after the books in the Great Libraries of Alexander and Baghdad had been copied and preserved there! How are we coming along with our accession project here?”

    “Well,” Ahmed was thoughtful. “About a thousand books from each have arrived, though it's a bit hard to say. The copies are being made in Lindisfarne, so there's no duplication. The last shipment had just left before the attack. The Commander of the ship learned of it at his next port. They arrived here the day before yesterday.

    “Aren't we about finished with that project?”

    “Yes,” Ahmed answered. “We nearly have a replication of the Combined Great Library here. Scribes are working on making copies, so we won't have the only copies on Turtle Island. Who knows what the Will of Allah may hold.

    “The loss of life at Lindisfarne concerns me.”

    “Yes, but they gave their lives defending the Holy Qur’án, and...and civilization itself! The invaders deserved to be crucified and that was done the next day. They warranted no mercy, the barbarians!”

    “We were barbarians once, too, you know, before Saint Branden reached our shores. Such a little thing, that currach, he and his men sailed in.”

    “I know,” Ahmed replied. “But WE didn’t attack him and his men.”

    “No, our people didn’t.”

    “Saint Branden and his men were famished when they reached these shores. If they hadn’t been taken in by our peoples, they would have perished for sure. Days and days of sailing, they had no idea the sea was so huge! They had no knowledge of our Land of Penobsquat. They were surprised to find land, and us, and that we knew of the Great Creator Spirit.”

    “They shouldn't have been that surprised that we believed,” Felix replied. “The Holy Qur’an does speak of each tribe having its own Messenger. It doesn't say that Messengers are limited to certain lands or peoples. We had Messengers here, as well as they did in Arabia and Europe.”

    “And, our teachings from the Times Before were, in many ways, much like those of Prophet Muhammad, Peace Be Upon Him.”

    “Praise Allah, for His wonders and bounties! And, the Might of Rome!

    “Yes,” Ahmed agreed. “One young Viking was made to watch the crucifixions, then sent back home with the heads of the rest.”

    “That should show them a lesson.”

    “I’m sure,” Ahmed agreed, then added. “The heads were returned in their own ship. Britannish sailors sailed it, then brought the ship back as a trophy. After touring the ports of Britannia and Gaul, they’ll sail it over here.

    “I’ll be interested in seeing it.”

    “It should be worthwhile to see. It's very different from a currach, or our canoes. The report said it was decorated in an outlandish fashion. Dragon ships they are called, with carved heads like fearsome beasts. They, themselves, are the beasts.”

    The young one too?”

    “That young Viking wasn’t sent home in one piece,” Ahmed added. “He was soundly mutilated to impress the point. As the song says: ‘A castrato he became, I hope he likes to sing!’” Ahmed paused.  “It will be a lesson they'll not soon forget. If they try such a raid again, we’ll invade their lands! We know where they’re from. The Norsemen have gone too far. They can stick to trading. They are good traders, you know.”

    “Do you think they'll return to invade Britannia again?”

    “Not likely.”

    The sun was setting through the trees, glinting off the river. The breeze was pleasant. It was a perfect late spring evening. Flowers were blooming on all sides. The two walked on, both deep in thought. They could hear the call to prayer as it echoed through the campus. The two men unconsciously quickened their pace.

    “I was thinking about offering a non-credit seminar next semester,” Felix remarked. “Just for fun actually, to challenge students to think outside the box.”

    “Oh?” Ahmed was intrigued.

    “For instance, one topic would be: What if the early Roman Empire had NOT been dedicated to education as well as conquest, and had NOT established schools for all the children of the Empire, and universities in the colonies in the new lands. If the natives had not been educated, just as our ancestors were, would they have reverted to their pre-Roman ways at some time?”

    “What an interesting proposition,” Felix replied. “I’ve never considered the possibility.”

   “And, aside from that, what if Holy Brendan had not sailed west from all known lands, and ended here. Imagine; that little hide-covered, wattle framed currach sailing all across the Great Sea! Even the Viking ship is larger! It’s an act of God that they arrived!”

    “And our ancestors welcomed them, revived them and accepted his instruction.”

    “That’s right!” Felix exclaimed in excitement. His friend was beginning to see the possibilities of taping the imagination. “Our people could have continued in their old ways, but they saw that Roman order was much more efficient and productive. They could defend themselves better when they fought like Legions. They saw the advantages at once. Being a part of the Roman Federation just makes sense.”

    “Holy Allah! We could have remained savages!”

     “Yes! And, another possibility: what if the Christians had defeated the forces of the Prophet, Peace Be Upon Him, at Tours and not the other way around. Unthinkable, I know, but, maybe then Islam wouldn't have spread throughout Europe and the world.”

    “But that’s impossible!” Ahmed expostulated.

    “You and I know that,” Felix countered. “But just because events went one way, doesn’t mean they couldn’t have gone another.”

    “But it was the Will of Allah.”

    “I know. But an exercise of the imagination is a good thing too.”

    “Your ideas are wild.” Ahmed shook his head in disbelief. He was much more comfortable with the stability of the Order of Law. But, after a thoughtful pause he asked, “Do you have trouble getting to sleep at night with such thoughts in your head?”

    “Sometimes,” Felix chuckled. “Sometimes I do.”

    Together they entered the mosque for evening prayers and the peace of dusk descended over Narragausett Bay.




Duane Herrmann, a reluctant carbon-based life-form, was surprised to find himself in 1951 on a farm in Kansas. He’s still trying to make sense of it but has grown fond of grass waving under wind, trees and moonlight. He aspires to be a hermit, but would miss his children, grandchildren and a few friends. He is known to carry baby kittens in his mouth, pet snakes, and converse with owls, but is careful not to anger them! His full-length collections of poetry include: Prairies of Possibilities, Ichnographical:173, Family Plowing, Remnants of a Life, No Known Address, Praise the King of Glory and Gedichte aus Prairies of Possibilities, plus a science fiction novel, and a number of chapbooks. Individual work has been published in more than sixty anthologies and Midwest Quarterly, Little Balkans Review, Flint Hills Review, Orison, Inscape, Lily Literary Journal, Hawai'i Review and others in print and online in English and languages he can't read. He is the recipient of the Robert Hayden Poetry Fellowship 1989, and the Ferguson Kansas History Book Award 2007 (for a local history). He survived a traumatic, abusive childhood embellished with dyslexia, ADHD (unknown at the time), cyclothymia, an anxiety disorder, PTSD.  


Four Poems by Jennifer Gurney

 



 


7 Up Popsicles

 

One summer evening, 

shortly after dinner, 

we were all hanging out. 

It was a typical 

hot and humid summer evening 

in Michigan 

in the early 1970s.

    

Parents were sitting in lawn chairs 

in the shade on front porches, 

drinking iced tea, 

or beer, 

trying to beat the heat.

 

Kids were playing - 

running in sprinklers,  

riding bikes, 

roller skating. 

 

My brother Joe and I 

were out front of our house 

when the music of the ice cream truck 

drifted our way. 

    

It was always a bit of magic 

when we heard the ice cream truck. 

Our thrifty mom had spent years 

tricking us about this phenomenon. 

She'd buy popsicles at the grocery store 

and when we heard the ice cream truck, 

she'd convince us that he'd come earlier 

while we were napping 

and she'd bought us popsicles. 

 

Then she'd pull them out of the freezer for us!

       

When we asked for popsicles that night, 

it was Dad who said yes. 

As he handed us money 

and asked for us to get he and Mom one, too, 

I asked what kind. 

“Surprise me,” was his reply.

 

Usually, I got a strawberry shortcake 

or an orange or rainbow push up. 

 

But that night, 

it was a different Ice cream man

altogether. 

It was a man with a push cart. 

We'd never seen him before.

 

In the spirit of surprising, 

I got my folks and I 

7 Up popsicles. 

I'd never heard of them before, 

but on this hot and sticky night,

they sounded refreshing. 

Joe got one, too. 

 

It was funny, 

although they were frozen, 

you could still sort of taste 

and feel 

the bubbles from the 7 Up. 

And they definitely tasted all 

lemony-limey. 

 

We loved them. 

 

I looked for those 7 Up popsicles 

on every Ice Cream truck for years. 

I looked in stores. 

I tried to make them at home 

with those plastic popsicle makers, 

but they never worked. 

The bubbles froze in place 

and created these weird air pockets, 

and the carbonation impeded the freezing, 

so they were mushy.

 

When I think of that night, 

more than 50 years ago now, 

it is captured in total 

with the memory of 

7 Up popsicles. 

Purchased from an ice cream man 

we'd never seen before 

and would never see again. 

Makes me wonder … 

was it real? 

Did it ever really happen?




That First Bite



That first bite

of black olive and cream cheese

on tiny pumpernickel

the kind that comes in squares

for fancy dinner parties



I weep

in the kitchen

bittersweet tears

of longing

and memory

for my

grandma



She made these

unusual sandwiches

born of

The Great Depression

when people succumbed

to creativity to

stave off the

ever-present-hunger



My first bite

of this amazing concoction

was on the first day

of our cross-country

road trip

to see my cousins

in the summer of 1977

45 years ago



Now

when I have the

ingredients for these

sandwiches

with that first bite

I am back in

Grandma’s old Dodge Dart

with the crank windows

no air conditioning

and only an AM radio



God I miss her.



It’s been nearly 20 years

now since she’s been gone

but she’s ever present

in my life

with that first bite.




Dipping a Toe in Joy



sometimes

I need to write a longer poem

to get all the words out



before I can write

a short poem

succinctly



this is

most definitely

one of those times



on the precipice

of 2024

I look back



in seeing the big

moments of the year

it is surprising



travelled four times

to see my family and friends

the most ever in my life



published

my first 500 poems

in just one year



hiked hundreds of miles

on my favourite trails

to my favourite lakes



danced under the stars

and sang full out

to every song



rode on the Harley

in and out of canyons

and several rainstorms



shared many luxurious

quiet moments at home

with music, words, cats



felt the sharp pangs

of grief and loss

alongside loneliness



painted

some of my favourite abstracts

soul-on-canvas moments



swam in Lake Michigan

and walked on her shore

your voice in my ear



cried millions of tears

but laughed harder and smiled more this year

than I can remember in forever



in looking back

I see the light beginning to shine

through the cracks in my heart



In 2023 I began to let go

of the accumulated pain

that has a tight grip



and dipped a toe

in hope, trust

and dare I say - joy



I began to let go …

pain gripping my heart

light through the cracks

dipped a toe

in joy

 



I Wake to the Day



I wake to the day

that is

pregnant with possibilities



and decide

to begin by writing

and never really stop



my online class

winter writing sanctuary

hooks me in



and hours later

my thoughts lift

to see the sun has risen



the scent of coffee and bacon

swirl through the air

a poem alights with my omelette



another and another still

as my boots make their way

around the lake



and a song

sings itself to me

on the short drive home



I’m quick

to grab paper

and pen



to capture the song

and the poems that were born

on this very progenous day



I know that’s not a word

but sometimes made-up words

are better than real ones



and the day itself

feels full

though it’s peaceful and calm



for the words

that connect

to each other



bring voice to all

on my heart

the speaking is sustenance



so a nap to refresh

before turning anew

to more words to connect to each other



and the healing that comes

from speaking aloud

the truths that reside in my soul







Jennifer Gurney lives in Colorado where she teaches, paints, writes and hikes. Her poetry has appeared internationally in a wide variety of journals, including Lothlorien, The Ravens Perch, HaikUniverse, Haiku Corner, Cold Moon Journal, Scarlet Dragonfly and The Haiku Foundation. Jennifer’s haiku has recently won the 6th Basho-an International English Haiku Competition. Her poetry has also been accepted into the Ars Nova Shared Vision project in Colorado and will be turned into a choral piece and performed in a series of concerts in the Denver area this June.



Five Poems by David L O’Nan

 





The Whiskey Mule Diner (on Caroline Street)

 

I was wandering out of Whiskey Mule, the night began fading

The city is falling all over itself and dude, you smell like onions

Taxis are hissing passing by just pissing, ripped pantyhose legends prancing drunk.

Just ask the crooked mayor, he’s had his share of temptations.

He’s burned all his morals and held his head high as he’s collapsing.

Three women all believe that he’s dedicated, but he’s living deep on the tip of the Dead-End hill.

 

The diner’s lights are blinking an epileptic fury.

The faithful and the shrinks are washing their cuts in the sink.

They have been harassing their soldiers through the flesh wounds of thunder.

Bullets and promises go damp with the blood circling the city streets.

Just another cup of coffee surrounded by dust, rust, and feathers. 

Our minds remember the times as a child of walking with family and preaching God to unlit skyscrapers

Bring light to this city you damn bawdy building! 

Nasty voices call down to teach us new sinning that we never knew would go past the blinds of those windows.

 

The cobwebs in the corners of the Caroline and Market Street are doing a Cain and Abel waltz.

Across each other, intertwined while the poisoned neon glow of the Whiskey Mule hits it.

Old men walking crooked onto the sidewalks with lust in their eyes and itchy coats and itchy crotches.

They want to see the man play something from the 1950’s ‘til he is out again poisoned, asleep on the jazz piano.

Lifting Jesus to the ceilings,  the waitresses are all crying except for the one who’s always smiling and fetching her phone number to a plumber, a priest, or a pariah that wandered in from the subway.

Sometimes this place has felt closed for hours,

sometimes it feels like it never stops breathing.

The fevers in this place is imminent and you walk out with hash browns in your hair.

Feeling like a motherfucker stuck in the drain.

 

At Whiskey Mule you began your marriage to a suicidal levitation.  You want to sit on

the back of a 1969 boss 429 mustang and pull at the corners of the hairs on your head.

Wailing to a friend that’ll die with you in the end, "buddy, Let’s create some shooting stars tonight”

And you’ll battle the fog in your stupor, and you’ll wish you had more pancakes and in circles

you’ll go, pushing and shoving hobos until you’ll step on a broken bottle and crawl back into the diner

...And some Barbara Mandrell will be playing Sleeping Single in a Double bed.

You’ll feel like the stomach bugs are carving through your skin. 

Go home to the wilderness of a quiet

apartment building that is surrounded by demons running around your head.

Drop the needle on the fading night.  Another day stalks in and abruptly gathers energy from the

lightbulb sun.

 

Watching the squalor fight the dandy with the curly hairs falling out of your itchy scalp. 

No longer a village wimp.  You’ll take the bait to the next offering.  Tracy will shake the bottle

and you can’t resist the bounce and the waves in the glass to the swarming through your throat

And you’ll dream of the fandango on a cobblestone bruising and the sunsets will sound like a sultry one-night stand.

Forget that crippling walk for just a little while and cut that rope from the sky, little man.

You’re asking to be certified, You’re asking to be hypnotized, but you keep asking to be recast as something

that doesn’t reflect in a puddle’s mirror, Jack.

 

The Whiskey Mule Diner on Caroline Street has good food and sometimes bad.

It has murmurs of grandiosity and mistakes to be had.

It has the memories, the merging from man to fallen angel.

It has the lazy eye blinking, It has the wisdom of a desire to escape the straitjacket.

And perform magic that illuminates from the squeezing.   

My mind is heading to a new home,

Whiskey Mule


 

Pinot Noir


1971, Bakersfield Cold day, cracked around the edges but laying sweaty under itchy blankets. After 3 A.M. drinking Pinot Noir with mustachioed confessions. Can’t trust sidewinders walking when their sliding on slick brick roads blinding- The regular man walks around with sociopathic confidence, and he dreams of all the wars ending long enough that he can find him a lady. He wants a family and he wants to die from the cigarettes, he wants to live on nothing but pennies. He wants it all to be wrapped up for him like a present, but does he know how to praise. So he decides not to fear him, he shall not be dismayed. He walks with him on a sunset through the meadows- looking for that new wave. Drinking Pinot Noir and thinking outside the box. He’s that same old man he was yesterday. He’s invented himself excuses, he’s playing fast and loosely. Calling all the phone numbers in his paper wallet. Which lips will he kiss tonight, or will he be just biting on his? Chapped up and feeling cold- boned, drunk and sad. He drops out a few dollars for dinner with a nobody he knew from 19 years before. She didn’t like him then; she doesn’t like him now. But he’s already got images of him pushing up her purity veil and calling her his forever. More pinot noir for the dipshit. Close your eyes and wake up with the phone dangling from the phonebooth and a hard-on grin, jazzed up and creepy. Your brother’s wife and kids find you there. She is laughing pitifully. She has never cared for you really. The children hide behind an umbrella and a mask of ass and back covering their face to hide away from Uncle Stranger. He’s just a drunkened wolf wandering the streets, howling between the sheets of both polars he must face, day after day. He never really knows his eyes and can barely feel his face. He’s just molded full of lines with pinkish skin cheeks with an early morning yellow pickling through. Boy, he’s a pinot noir away from chasing Jesus to the cross. He wants to be crucified first, and let the city wash away his sins. That olive green mattress and his wino schemes has led him to three divorces and one incredible night that he relives over again and tries to regain back in his pulsing mind.




 

All That is Left for Wanda

 

I called her up on a whim after a muddy day, a useless brain

My hair was messy, not quite wakeful, I remember a time we skinny dipped together and had a picnic 

about 20 Summers ago.

 

All that is left for Wanda

Is a smoking gun and a bottle of gin

Her eyes are heavy with worry

And her heart is heavy with sin.

 

I heard  through having to know

that fuckin' Larry was living in a prison cell.

He was a measly twerp back then, and a barroom skunk.

Even after all these years, I can still be irritated when trying to hide my empathic heart.

 

The world around her is fading

As she stares off into the abyss

Her thoughts are dark and twisted

And she yearns to escape all of this.

 

The whiskey begins flowing like a river

and it taste about the quality of a ditch.

She dances to a sad tune by Crazy Horse.

She doesn't know where she's going.

But she knows it won't be coming soon.

 

She thinks of me as a little nosy and nutty,

some body odour, a wet dog on a rainy day

breath like Papst Blue Ribbon and well-made chili

Dude, just give me a break. I'm tired of man. Always talks of jailbreaks.

You sound raspy and one breath from a lung collapsing.

 

But I'm still wanting you Wanda, and she just laughs.

"There's a memory of what could have been"

She begins to become quiet, glancing at a newspaper.

Feeling emptiness, looking at an unfunny cartoon and laughing like the insane.

You can see in her eyes she was staring down the roads of her past.

 

The clock is ticking faster

As the night draws to a close.

And all she can do is wonder.

If she'll ever find repose.

Smoggy night, frogs sound drunk. Neighbour boys throwing rocks at trucks.

The wind is stout and erect, and pulling our brawny bodies down easy in the chilly rain.

 

Is there no hope for her

As she takes one final swig.

And throws her keys to the mud.

Tells me she's heading to a rich palace far far away.

She disappears past the scarecrows and the hypnotizing Eagle eyes

Leaving only memories of what she hid.  What was said.  What was gained.  Can't soothe the sick.

 

The shadows reach out to her,

She staggers into the night.

The panoply of chickens follow

and my disease is too thirsty to ease her pain.

 

We both gave into the madness.

Mine is from years of regret in a rocking chair,

mine is hilariously laughing myself of the ironies of death.

We all walk these twisted winding streets.

All that was left for Wanda, was hissing, was the sail to the chasm.



Kept Going

 

As a youthful ant, believing love was real

I’d search and preach, sometimes i’d creep

From Earth, sands, heartache, one with the unnamed

With laughter always knowing I had been used

I was stepped on, ripped apart, but kept on walking

 

As a descending star

I’m falling, sinking, faint, into the grey

Bewitching breeze, bending wishful knees,

Believing in the green

With tears always knowing I had been used

Like overnight love.

 

Was left solo, alone, but kept shining

 

As a boring Hybrid Tea Rose

Some have glanced, they have danced, drowning in 

The ideal romance

Never finding a home, shunned once we see the evening’s eye

With a wilting pedal drying from the use

Never to be blackened, I kept my brightness

 

As a cresting unbalanced river

I’d be rowed away, negated to be safe,

Reserved for the rain

I could have easily flooded the plains

With a rippled cry, feeling useless

Never to be eroded,

I kept on flowing

 

As a human feeling

I’ve learned my strengths,

Became tough through the adversity

I’ve learned to forgive, 

Hoping to someday myself be forgiven

Never to be corroded by fear



Silent Room Painting

 

Oh, painting on the wall

Like the devil

Burning victims with a smile

Room still silent, 

Never minding that tears are loud

I’m cruising by,

Mind playing energetic

Floating like a missile across the veins

Echo, echo, vibrate, nothing

Cold glue stuck upon the heart, your shoe

Walking lightly,

Then stomping, seal it tight

No one is new, no mind is new

It has been used by many younger, much braver

Whispered wiser

Painting on the wall, so greedy

Clapping together colours that are clashing

Beaming eyes living for my ashes

Claws digging inside my soul, scooping out the clarity.





David L O’Nan is a Midwest poet, editor and founder of Fevers of the Mind (www.feversofthemind.com

He has been nominated for Best of the Net numerous times.

His books include The Famous Poetry Outlaws are Painting Walls and Whispers, Before the Bridges Fell, New Disease Streets, Cursed Houses, The Cartoon Diaries, Our Fear in Tunnels,  Taking Pictures in the Dark and Lost Reflections. 

He has edited and curated Fevers of the Mind Anthologies and several inspired by special editions from Kerouac to Plath to Cohen to Bowie and more.

 


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