PARABLE
See that man. On a
hard road home.
Look at his beard. It's grown too
long.
Look at his eyes. Cool as swordfish.
Spies a bright comet.
See him wish.
Mark his shuffle. He's a guilty
man.
Witness to himself with enmity and
He stops in an inn. Sleeps in a field.
It's dark in the forest. The leaves too
still.
He climbs the pines. Seeks nests until
One falling star falls. Rests where
it will—
Far out in the sand. He prays in
silence.
To wish is too grand. He must do penance.
The wolf is at hand. Zones in for the
kill.
Hear the man: "I won't be a
parable."
He whispers he shouts. Into an
ill wind.
Did he make it out? Or is he still in?
I AM THE WOMAN
I lost my daughter.
I don't remember when.
I don't count the weeks.
No calendars for me.
The open windows and
My mirrors tell
all the time I need to know.
I don't truck with
numbers.
A grisly nothingness hides in them,
somehow:
I had 1 daughter—
she disappeared with her father.
I had 1 husband—
he vanished with my daughter.
That's 2, already.
See what I mean about numbers?
Don't answer.
It doesn't matter.
Please leave
before
I ask you to stay.
FACELESSLY TRUE
That man has no face and
she's got no head.
I'd better turn
away.
La la la, la la hey.
I'm looking for a city park fountain.
Baptism dunk in waterspin
as rats distill brown sewer gin.
Mythic sprinkler system siphons Lethe.
Its yellow snowmelt and black sleet
are where our fleeting memories meet.
A broken fire hydrant,
defiant,
one block up from Stuyvesant,
outside a napalmed tanning salon,
waits for the joint to be well-done.
Can't even trust a safe fake sun.
Small disasters are big miracles
If you know how to look away.
La la la, la la hey!
Skyward is astray. Stars blink fancy but
NO VACANCY.
Everybody,
I'm on drugs and THE DRUGS ARE ON ME.
La la la, la la whee!
How'd he lose his face, didja see?
Not my affair, and besides
he's still got a crop of hair that shines.
There's nothing underneath my feet
I haven't stepped in or had to eat.
Or upchucked.
Enough to fill your dump trucks.
The street is flat meat.
Gutter roadkill skeleton.
Every word is for lack of a better one.
The asphalt gapes beneath the heat
like a megaton tideturn.
Decisive rattle.
Incisor gristle battle.
I'm sticking a scalpel
into my lapel. Because this
is the Big Apple.
Turn aside from miracles.
The snidest firecracker only
goes off behind your back
and years ago.
But who am I to ridicule?
Nobody that's who.
The public that's who.
The rats that's who.
The headless that's who.
Facelessly true.
Who died and made you?
THE WITCH HUNT
Don't pretend you've no elves in your hat
That you wear careless
Like it fell there
From a tornado passing
That everyone missed but you.
That's right. You stand in disaster
With your smirk and your fingers
Working small marks in the air.
Do you really know the big secret?
Is that why you're so angelic?
Are you sure you're pixie-free?
The magic circle carbon copied?
Your face can't hide the death's head.
I demand you reveal your heritage
Before I strike up the witch hunt.
THE GONE FOR GOOD
I meet those who have gone for good
on weedy asphalt plains, senile
streets,
their names and numbers long forgot.
There is a network of collapse made of
nothing but crossroads. Just
take
the avenue you spotted
clogged with broken inventions
of wind
in direction not cardinal not
ordinal
without prediction, almost too pale to
take in.
. . . The gone for good have left for
worse; there's
no turning backward for them.
Funny how forward is like being trapped.
Eternity is the next stop.
Do you recall That Summer in
Brooklyn
when I asked you into my bedroom?
You said no the first time and Yes
the last.
The gone for good are like that Yes—
as full of promise as they are empty
gas.
And can you guess what they want of me?
Only to be remembered to the ones
that
linger here a little while, we
who pretend
at immortality by waking each day.
By sleeping in the dark. I wish they had
more
to say. I wish we too, when I come back.
Erik T. Johnson - Erik. T. Johnson's short stories have been featured in a range of literary/speculative fiction periodicals, such as Space and Time Magazine; British Fantasy Journal; Electric Velocipede; Sein und Werden; Clarion; and Structo.
His own short fiction collection, Yes Trespassing, was released in 2017 to positive reviews from professional publications and readers alike. A book of the weird and surreal, This is Horror UK stated that “YES TRESPASSING is a magnum opus of staggering proportions . . . One of the best, most beautifully written collections of this or any other year.”
Erik is currently writing poetry being set to music by, and performing with, the composer Gene Pritsker and other members of Composers Concordance, a group of some of the best musicians in the world. Erik and Gene have released several song cycles available on Spotify, the most recent of which is the jazzy Let's Save The World Suite.
You can learn more about Erik's work at www.eriktjohnson.net.
No comments:
Post a Comment