Even in What Cheer, Iowa they Built an Opera House
And you would never know it’s there,
unless you’ve been there,
because it’s not the type of place that is
renowned, yet, even here in the middle of these bald farms
there was a desire for the type of art and community that separates
classes. I’m driving through town, on the phone
with my wife, she’s retelling a conversation
she had with my son and cannot remember
if I was there or not. Neither can I.
We both assume I wasn’t, because I am usually lost
to the internet, or the siren song of thought.
I cut through town like a tongue through words,
lost to the scenes outside the window, lost to the enduring cycles.
Some snow has melted, slid from the hilltop,
framing a crown, or a friar’s head—
and a pair of eagles circle the sicled crop.
LUNCH AFTER THE HIKE
Lunch after the hike
And you found Boonie’s—
Soon to be world famous,
Down the street
Muscatine Bank, Est. 1870.
TV’s so loud you can’t hear
Each other speak. So you speak
With your eyes.
And your eyebrows.
Every point counts. Everything
Adds up. Your son decides to root
For the rival in the hometown bar.
Just like you once chose the rival
Of your dad’s team, and stuck
With them long into adulthood.
In the afternoon light, dust is settling
On the forehead of the yellow football
Helmet on the wall above your table.
DOGWALKING AT MIDNIGHT
It was the kind of night where he jumps at the
length of his own shadow,
out from behind the do I convey what I feel,
or what they feel I should feel,
kind of thoughts. So sick of consuming
this commercialism, but to get away
we'd have to drag ourselves out
into some cornfield, with our noses stuck
halfway up each other's ass,
maybe then. . ..
Just when I get to thinking no one in this
neighbourhood will remember me,
the cottonwood clap for my being here.
devoured
a certain kind of stasis devours
us, passing time waiting for dessert.
so we're out for another walk
in the church of spiny spires.
the bumblebee passes me
saying, crazy times man,
crazy times.
with flowering grasses and
arrowheads in your eyes you say,
i have a feeling
with flowering grasses and
arrowheads in your eyes you say,
i have a feeling
even the marrow in our bones
finds its way to the soil.
words like shovels dig
the fog, digging ‘til bedrock
of the mind. then you ask to take
some flowers home.
under the church of lacquered birch
catkins worm at our feet.
it’s in our bones you say, with flowers
firmly in your fist,
the worm of tireless habit
is in our bones.
ALL THIS LIGHT ESCAPES ME
Rust percolates everywhere:
Inside my soft belly
last year's leaves
gutter soak
The hillside turns
& turns as it chews
& chews the soft membrane
of itself
stalks of reed filled by dark
wait to explode
Daniel J Flosi sometimes thinks they are an apparition
living in a half-acre coffin within the V of the Mississippi and Rock Rivers.
Daniel is a poetry reader at Five South, and is the founder/EiC of Black Stone
/ White Stone. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Funicular Magazine,
ELJ- Scissors & Spackle, Inklette, The Good Life Review, and Zero Readers
and many more. Drop a line @muckermaffic
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