Tuesday, 7 September 2021

Five Fantastic Poems by Lauren Scharhag


 

Cursed Images


an ekphrastic poem, of a sort

 

Old man in a wood-panelled room with crates of tomatoes.

Display tables made of two-by-fours and oil drums.

 

Not cursed like Cain or King Tut’s tomb;

not cursed like a thespian dooming himself

by uttering the name of the Scottish play.

Nor is it that you, viewer, are the one who’s cursed

for looking upon them,

like Ham beholding his father’s shame.

 

A crude cross covered in black garbage bags.

Crucified to it a naked Barbie.

 

It’s that there are places – moments –

in this world that are cursed.

Sometimes, they are only a few feet wide,

an anomaly of physics,

like Santa Cruz’s Mystery Spot,

where gravity and perspective seem to bend

in the uncanny hush of redwoods.

They’re there for just an instant,

then gone again.

 

A woman at a kitchen counter slicing salami

with an old Windows XP disc.

 

The internet, like all communities,

has spawned its own lore,

spoken in the language it knows best:

let us bring you disquiet in pixels.

 

A herd of sheep at dusk, beneath an orange and charcoal sky.

Dozens of pairs of glowing eyes bore into you.

 

The unease that you crave.

All nightmares are composed of fragments

of real life. Your mind gives them

back to you, off-kilter. Why do we seek it out?

Oh, we like novelty. We like sensation.

 

A man wearing a hollowed-out koala bear plushie

as a mask, casually sipping beer through a straw,

 

Violent content teaches us about violence.

It’s a defence mechanism.

Feeling creeped out, that’s just the body’s response

to something ambiguous, when something’s

not quite right and you can’t put your finger

on why. The mind hovers, unable to light.

Friend or foe? Threat, or not a threat?

Real or unreal?

 

A crowd of grey aliens.

There’s a woman standing behind them for scale.

They’re just children in costumes—aren’t they?

 

Existential horror. Cosmic horror.

A place where other universes bleed

into this one, or a bend in the U-joint

between heaven and hell, and it’s

so very hard to tell sometimes

what is real.

 

Night cam. A child, barefoot,

wearing a nightgown,

standing with two deer,

in the middle of a forest.

Too still. They might be angels

or ghosts or demons.

 

Monsieur Daguerre who first captured

the Boulevard du Temple

in copper and silver and iodine

could never have imagined this:

our reality now composed of images.

Pics or it didn’t happen. We live

in images. We feed on images.

1.2 trillion digital photos will be taken this year.

More photos taken every two minutes

than there were taken in the entirety

of the 18th century. Of course some pictures

would take on a life of their own.

A life means a personality.

Not all personalities are friendly.

 

A dank basement with a table, dolls arranged

around it in the manner of The Last Supper.

Coins scattered on the table top.

You would think they were 30 pieces of silver

but they’re not. Just plain old Lincoln pennies,

dull with tarnish.

 

Some Native Americans and Aborigines

still refuse to be photographed.

The Kayapos of the Amazon call photography

akaron kaba, “to steal a soul.”

The Amish believe photos are graven images.

We give our souls every day

for selfies and profile shots.

We make of ourselves graven images.

 

A shopping mall fountain geysers what,

at first glance, appears to be blood.

Water dyed blood-red.

Undoubtedly a St. Valentine’s Day miscalculation,

a celebration of a sports team with red jerseys.

Or blood. It could be blood.

 

They say you photograph anything

that you can’t bear to lose.

Time is the fire in which we burn

and photographs are our way

of rushing back into the flames

to salvage our keepsakes.

A scar is also a keepsake.

Our brains cling to the hurt.

Nothing teaches like a hurt.

Masochism a necessity.

 

A suburban lawn overrun by badgers.

 

The world is wrong. It’s nice to know

that no, we’re not crazy.

It’s really, really wrong.

In a time of Photoshop and filters

and deep fakes, this unblinking ugliness

is almost a comfort.

Art used to hold a mirror up to society.

Now, we live inside that mirror.

 

Dysfunctional furniture. Odd food combinations.

Dolls and mannequins. Masks and costumes.

Eerie hallways. Dark and empty rooms.

A necklace of human teeth.

Crepuscular creatures. Uncanny faces

captured by front door cams.

 

What is wrong. What is wrong. What is wrong.

We are. We are. We are.

We are wrong. And we juxtapose.

And we are absurd. And we squirm.

 

A staircase in the middle of a forest

that has no business being

in the middle of a forest.

Not a foundation stone nor any other

parts of a building in sight.

Just stairs. Leading up to nowhere.

Leaves collecting in the risers.

 

Except we are the slayer of our brother,

the brazen archaeologist disturbing

the pharaoh’s eternal rest. Except we are

Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth,

rubbernecking at Noah’s drunken shenanigans.

 

An old black and white photo,

1960s Butterick dresses and Formica.

Two nice-looking ladies having lunch with a nun.

The nun’s eyes a diabolical flash.  

 

We are the technology the way

the creator is us,

which means God is also

dirt and God is also

cursed

with us.


 

Of a Feather


for Gabi Mann

 

Myth, fable, folklore, legend—

this is how they’re born,

with an unusual child,

a connection to the animal world.

It can still happen, even in our time.

 

The crow was the only creature

who survived the Great Flood,

the coming of the third age of man.

 

It started with an accident,

a messy pre-schooler, a bit of dropped food.

Then she began to share with them,

morsels from her lunchbox

on the way to the bus stop.

 

In a pinch, may our wits serve us,

the way a few dropped pebbles in a pitcher

becomes an epiphany, and the thirsty crow

drinks.

 

Then her back yard became a shrine,

offerings of water and peanuts,

like the Temple of the Rats in Rajasthan,

feeding creatures that some call pests

and some call mischief, some call God

and some call darkness.

 

This is the story of how the crow’s rainbow feathers

turned black, and his once-beautiful voice

went hoarse forever.

 

Grateful, the crows bring baubles,

which she catalogues, as if it were a royal treasury:

here is the heart-shaped button of pearl,

here is half a friendship charm,

here are screws and bits of metal,

here are Legos and marbles,

here are the river-polished courtship stones.

 

It is said that the spirit of King Arthur lives on

in the form of a crow.

 

The birds watch her watching them.

They return a lost camera lens,

but only after washing it first

in the bird bath. I wonder if she feels

protected, even as she protects them,

a princess with her loyal guard.

 

Once upon a time, there was a girl

who loved crows, and they loved her.

 

Which begs the question,

are they her power animal or

is she theirs? Do the crows tell,

amongst themselves, the tale

of a hungry murder and

a beneficent human child,

or perhaps the coming of a great crow,

born in the guise of a maiden?

 

The girl didn’t know it,

but the crows’ gifts would eventually

weave a spell that would turn her back

into her true form.

 

Now the neighbours complain about the mess,

about clogged gutters and drainpipes,

the accumulation of feathers and droppings

and peanut shells. The magical and

the mundane have always had

so little tolerance for one another.

 

I hope she is learning their language.

I hope she is already weaving the tale

she will leave behind.

 

One day, she would have to choose.

 

Walkers between worlds eventually

must settle, and what girl doesn’t dream

of flight, of prophecy,

of spreading her wings

and departing this world for home?

 

In time, the crow pierces us all.


 

Service Dogs

inspired by Healing Paws for Warriors

 

You hear stories about dogs

who’ve been through horrific ordeals:

fighting rings, hoarders, puppy mills,

or just plain old neglect,

chained in yards,

discarded on roadsides;

brought to the shelter

starving, sick, injured,

heart full of worms,

hide full of ticks.

Survival doesn’t seem possible,

until it does.

 

Survival isn’t always the hardest part.

Even after the body heals,

there is still the spirit

to contend with.

Some take longer

to stop cringing,

to stop snarling and snapping,

to accept kindness.

Eventually,

they seem to forget.

 

Teach me, dog, to forget.

Teach me to live

in the moment,

and not

in the echoes

of war.

 

Years after

I’ve taken off my dog tags,

I still cringe,

I still snarl and snap.

 

We are both wanderers

in from the desert,

land of Old Mother Bowwow,

lady of the dogs,

licker of wounds.

Teach us how to live

with water and grass,

how to live with soft voices

and gentle hands.

 

Somehow, with wagging tail

and lolling tongue,

you bear the weight

of our combined brokenness.

 

I almost envy your duty

which began the moment

you licked

my hand. 


 

The Holy Sweet

 

For over 300 years,

in a secret temple kitchen

in Andhra Pradesh,

they have made

this humble confection:

chickpea flour, clarified butter,

sugar, cashew nuts,

raisins and cardamom.

The sacred tirupati laddu,

offering to Venkateswara.

To make it is both an honour

and a responsibility

awarded only to a few

select cooks. The recipe,

like Coca-Cola or KFC’s

eleven herbs and spices,

is top secret. When freshly made,

it should weigh exactly

178 grams. As it cools, it reduces

to 174. Such precision,

such reverence. To partake,

one must undertake a pilgrimage.

Only a few rupees, about 15 cents apiece,

limit three per customer.

Over 300,000 a day served,

a gamut of high-tech coupons

with facial recognition,

of long lines made up

of the faithful or merely

the famished. It is one of the few

products of the world that merits

a GI tag, like champagne

or Darjeeling tea.

Accept no substitutes.

Make your offering

first to the deity,

then you may consume it.

If you want to taste

what God tastes,

if you want to have

your sins destroyed,

you must prove

yourself worthy.


 

The Dead Watch


 

In my suburban house, in my 

suburban neighbourhood, beige facade, 

place without memory, I build 

a Day of the Dead altar in my room. 

I am 14, struggling to connect 

to my roots. I set out old photos, 

my grandfather's broken pocket watch,

fragrant coffee and copal, a potted marigold.

It is a pale imitation. I am a pale imitation.

Sometime after midnight, I fall asleep.

In my dreams, the watch ticks

and the dead awaken.







Lauren Scharhag (she/her) is an associate editor for GLEAM: Journal of the Cadralor, and the author of thirteen books, including Requiem for a Robot Dog (Cajun Mutt Press) and Languages, First and Last (Cyberwit Press). Her work has appeared in over 150 literary venues around the world. Recent honors include the Seamus Burns Creative Writing Prize and multiple Best of the Net and Pushcart Prize nominations. She lives in Kansas City, MO. To learn more about her work, visit: www.laurenscharhag.blogspot.com

 



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