Friday 11 March 2022

Five Poems by Bernardo Villela




Seagulls Fleeing New Gomorrah


The colony of seagulls

flocked around the man

who was a black

pillar of salt but

as he moved and

shook life into

his saline-packed

limbs, they flew.



Arising, squawking

they flutter off afraid,

they hunger still, but

know that food can

be found elsewhere.



They are survivors,

they won’t chance

to remain near a

mysterious igneous

being who shambles

his briny body back

and forth, crunching

the ice-embrittled

ground underfoot.



Their squalling caw caws

bloom as they’re aloft,

telling all of the peril

they are leaving behind.




A Painted Farewell-Letter


Safflower whorls of angel-hair,

and cornflower promises of sweet relief,

soothe my brimstone-singed soul.



Life’s verse a wheel of time,

burnt by night-piercing solar flare,

Paradise robbed by black hole.



Beautiful hopes and twisted dreams put me

in a breaking-wheel of circular rhyme

and paint the world my afscheidsbrief.




The Wide Blue World Turned Sideways


The wide blue world turns sideways,

the slack black world burns wide-ways.

From a narrow a window I spied

that many innocents sinners died

and more guilty saints cried;

and the culprits evade punishments

for all the times they lied,

and have never faced banishments

for all the happiness they denied.



Baptismal drownings inspired delta blues,

bellicose killings bloodied soldiers’ shoes,

the death and heat increasing year-by-year;

escalating violence, accelerating destruction,

oaths and promises fulfilled by death.

Comforting prevarications we still believe

because it’s still blue that the sky bleeds.

The flow un-stemmed, no matter what we tried,

Mother Earth no longer cares for our needs.

Felled by our own foolish pride.




Revealed by Moonblood


The Ivory Steed watched

as the moonblood into the sea dripped

as sanguine tides tossed

black-light about

bathed in lunar plasma.

Behemoth ashore breathed

deep, danced for joy.



The Red Stallion glared

as black sunlight colour stripped

the enrobed Chosen climbed,

as tumbling astros broke

time, in spilt black-light

Leviathan was revealed

deep in the ocean.



The Coal-Coated Colt observed,

the stars down the sky tripped,

the opened heavens dimmed

monster silhouette rose,

wings aflap, breathing heavy fire

the Dragon swooped

synced to the star-fall’s motion.



The Pallid Palomino gazed,

the world’s corners cleft,

the bedrock cracked

as livid-stained souls

upward through grey clay

the Demon Prince twirled

enthralled by the new-damned convoy.




The Livid-Coloured Dead


Night fell into his shirt and pants,

drunken arms akimbo expose

a freedom and naked desire,

cigarette burning carcinogenic fire.



Nearby drunkards build a pyre;

birds and dogs offer help,

resisting gravity’s forces,

erecting woody concourses,

to burn all the remorses

the dead may’ve possessed.

Drunkenly dancing dances expressed

the need for spirits to be expressed.



The Blue Man, ringleader, staggered.

Equilibrium gone from the blaggard.

Vacant stares from his ersatz crew.

Tears

cried by mourners most haggard

for Toms, Dicks, and Harrys

these virginal fields have lacquered.



But the premier danseur in cobalt

is unmoved seeking to work the gestalt

he’s created, sanctifying the graveyard.

He and the crew run into bad luck

into grave-beds the dead they can’t tuck,

into that good night they do not go gentle.



So now the battle is not physical but mental.

The livid-coloured dead pit ferocious resistance

against the cobalt’s crew’s frightened insistence,

locked in battle, the rising dead are transcendental.



Bernardo Villela has had poetry published by Entropy, Zoetic Press, and Bluepepper and forthcoming in Eldritch & Ether; and poetry translations in New Delta Review and AzonaL. You can read more about these and various other pursuits at www.miller-villela.com

 

 

 

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Four Poems by Elaine Sorrentino

  Before and After My life is measured in befores and afters. Before slimming down I was a carefree, kind, jocular teen After, I was self-a...